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All Seasons

Season 1984

Season 1986

  • S1986E01 The AIDS Panic

    • February 17, 2023

    Early coverage of the AIDs epidemic in the United Kingdom

Season 2001

Season 2003

Season 2005

  • S2005E03 12/01/2005

    • January 12, 2005
    • BBC Two

    The IF series of drama-documentaries examines the existing problems with drug prohibition and hears the arguments in favor of legalization. Based on rigorous research and interviews with experts, the programme hears the arguments for leaving the most dangerous drug of all - crack cocaine - illegal, and examines how a legal and regulated system of drugs would work. The guests discussing the issues with Jeremy Paxman for the Newsnight debate were: * Danny Kushlick, director of Transform Drug Policy Foundation * Keith Hellawell, UK Drugs Czar 1998-2002 * Andrew Johns, forensic psychiatrist at the Maudsley Hospital * Emma Bonino MEP, former EU humanitarian affairs commissioner director of Transform Drug Policy Foundation: Danny Kushlick UK Drugs Czar 1998-2002: Keith Hellawell forensic psychiatrist at the Maudsley Hospital: Andrew Johns former EU humanitarian affairs commissioner: Emma Bonino MEP

Season 2008

  • S2008E100 11/09/2008

    • September 11, 2008
    • BBC Two

    Broadcast the night of the Large Hadron Collider switch on, Professor Brian Cox explains to Jeremy Paxman and Sir David King (the president of the British Association for the Advancement of Science) why curiosity-driven scientific research is of vital importance for the future of humanity.

Season 2010

  • S2010E01 22-07-2010

    • July 22, 2010
    • BBC Two

    In-depth investigation and analysis of the stories behind the day's headlines with Gavin Esler. On the day that Lib Dem peer Lord Carlile publishes his review of terror laws, Richard Watson asks, is the government going soft on terror? Plus progress in finding the elusive Higgs-Boson or 'God particle' and the government's new National Citizenship Service for 16-year-olds.

Season 2011

  • S2011E41 01/03/2011

    • March 1, 2011
    • BBC Two

    John Galliano's anti-Semitic remarks could have turned into a full scale diplomatic crisis. Why? Because, as any fashionista knows, Dior - who he designs for - is the label worn by one Mrs Sarkozy. Carla Bruni started life as a Dior model and has remained loyal to the house ever since. As things turned out, Dior was not prepared to see a YouTube video start a new war in the Middle East. They sacked Galliano earlier today. And the first lady of France is now free to wear Dior again. Anyway, I write that in passing because there are, as you know, currently more pressing diplomatic affairs at hand. Tonight, Niall Ferguson, author of Civilization, will help us examine the role of the West in the revolution in the Arab world - and explain what history can tell us about why certain cultures appear to dominate the world at certain times. We'll also be asking whether the government's done enough in its adjustment to the international development aid budget to allay criticism that we are funnelling money into dodgy dictatorships and into countries that are economically far more successful than we are. Plus, the European Court of Justice has declared it is discriminatory to charge women less than men for their car insurance. Women are better drivers. Men die younger. What's wrong with discrimination within the free market?

  • S2011E42 02/03/2011

    • March 2, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Forces loyal to Libyan leader Colonel Muammar Gaddafi have moved into eastern areas for the first time since towns there fell to protesters two weeks ago, with reports of heavy fighting between them and anti-Gaddafi rebels in the oil town of Brega, 100 miles south of the rebel stronghold of Benghazi. Earlier Col Gaddafi said on TV he would "fight until the last man and woman" and warned that thousands of Libyans would die if Western forces intervened. Tonight, as we will have the latest on the Gaddafi fight back from Lyse Doucet in Benghazi and Tim Whewell will be assessing whether there is any sign of a joined up global response to the crisis. Michael Crick is Barnsley ahead of tomorrow's by-election finding out what matters most to voters there. Also, more than 600 Oxbridge academics are demanding a halt to the £9,000 tuition fee rise, saying they have had no time to work out how it will be implemented. Universities Minister David Willetts and one of those critics will go head to head on the programme tonight.

  • S2011E43 03/03/2011

    • March 3, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation has been given government approval for its controversial bid to take over BSkyB. The green light follows News Corp's offer to spin off Sky News as an independent company. Rival media groups dismissed News Corp's offer as a "whitewash" and said they would "vigorously contest" it. We will be examining the decision and speaking to the man who made it, Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt. Lyse Doucet will bring us the latest on what is happening in Libya. Tim Whewell has a film on Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood - who they are and what they stand for. And we ask whether, despite all of the fanfare accompanying Saturday's World Book Night plan to give away one million books, there are any problems with a great book giveaway.

  • S2011E44 04/03/2011

    • March 4, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Mishal Husain is presenting tonight and she's been speaking exclusively to Nato Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen about how his organisation plans to respond to events in Libya. Meanwhile Lyse Doucet - who is in the country - will be asking Libyans what intervention they expect from the West. Then we'll be hearing from our Political editor Michael Crick who has been meeting people living in rural areas to ask them how rising fuel prices are affecting their lives. And Liz Mackean has had exclusive access to a report which has found that many local authorities will not be guaranteeing funding and will be cutting services for victims of domestic violence from the end of this month. Should local authorities be the sole providers of these services? We'll debate.

  • S2011E45 07/03/2011

    • March 7, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight we have an amazing film from Jackie Long about Sarah Palin. Jackie has been to Alaska and got more than just a quick doorstep interview with the woman herself. She tells us how she is weighing up whether the US is ready for an "unconventional" presidential candidate like her. We also talk to Sarah Palin's parents who are concerned their daughter might be assassinated. David Cameron promised "the most pro-growth budget this country has seen for a generation" in his speech at the weekend, but what are the prospects for the British economy and what are the chances of real growth? We'll be hearing from our economics editor Paul Mason. Read Paul's blog. And Prince Andrew remains under pressure over his friendship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, an American financier. Michael Crick has been following the Prince around today and will bring us up to date tonight.

  • S2011E46 08/03/2011

    • March 8, 2011
    • BBC Two

    What are the options for western intervention over Libya? Should we arm the rebels? The idea is being considered by the White House but how realistic is it and how tricky politically? Tonight we'll look at the options for western governments and their possible outcomes. We are hoping to speak to the former Republican presidential candidate Senator John McCain to get his views. We will also consider what is behind these questions in the Middle East and North Africa with the American linguist and philosopher Noam Chomsky. How do the recent events affect Chomsky's world view? You can see a preview of the interview here. The government has been criticised over its handling of the crisis in Libya, most notably over getting Briton's out. But there have been other perceived gaffes too raising questions over the government's competence. Remember the U turn over the sale of forests? We'll get the latest take on the how well the government is doing with its presentation skills from some politically savvy guests. And we'll be asking - why is sectarianism still so strong in Glasgow? A summit was held in Edinburgh today chaired by First Minister Alex Salmond following last week's Old Firm Scottish Cup replay which saw three red cards, several touch-line and tunnel confrontations and 34 arrests inside Celtic Park. Why has antipathy between Protestants and Catholics survived for so long in the city?

  • S2011E47 09/03/2011

    • March 9, 2011
    • BBC Two

    The big hitters in government have appeared before the Defence Select Committee today at a time when it is being asked whether defence cuts have left the military without the resources to be effective in Libya and in future crises. We will have some expert analysis from General Sir Richard Dannatt and a full report on what the Defence Secretary Liam Fox and Foreign Secretary William Hague told MPs. We'll also be asking whether growing backbench anger could lead to the defence review being reopened. We also have a report from DR Congo on the child sex trade. Reporter Sam Farmer joins members of the children's parliament in DR Congo as they try to help fellow children who are working in the sex trade. The film centres on the efforts of a 15-year-old boy in the children's parliament who is trying to advocate more rights for these youngsters. Closer to home the government has announced that displaying cigarettes is to be banned in England. But will it stop smoking? We'll look at the evidence and examine how the promotion of cigarettes has changed over the years. And Jeremy will be talking to Jim Davidson live about humour and bigotry. The comedian has written a play about an old racist comedian who is challenged by a young black performer.

  • S2011E48 10/03/2011

    • March 10, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Unions have reacted angrily to a major report by Lord Hutton proposing a radical overhaul of public sector pensions which would see millions working for longer. David Grossman will be examining the fine print for us tonight. The former business secretary Lord Mandelson will be presenting an authored piece on economic globalisation and will join us live in the studio. Then, as Nato defence ministers meet in Brussels to discuss the possibility of a no-fly zone in Libya, our diplomatic editor Mark Urban will consider if military action of this nature could be considered war in all but name. And Sarfraz Manzoor meets the band Cornershop to talk about their new album - due out next week - which is heavily influenced by Punjabi folk music.

  • S2011E49 11/03/2011

    • March 11, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Japan's most powerful earthquake since records began has struck the north-east coast, triggering a massive tsunami. Tonight our Science editor Susan Watts will give her assessment of what has happened and why, and ask how well the warning systems worked. Mishal Husain will be speaking to the EU Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid Kristalina Georgieva about what help we are offering. Meanwhile in Saudi Arabia, hundreds of police were deployed in Riyadh, on the day anti-government rallies were planned. Our correspondent Sue Lloyd Roberts is there and sends us a compelling report on the day's events. Security forces blocked roads and set up checkpoints in an attempt to thwart protests. Protests are illegal in Saudi Arabia, which has had an absolute monarchy since its unification in the 1930s. Read more from Sue in Riyadh by clicking here. And Iain Watston is at the Liberal Democrat spring conference - which is getting under way in Nick Clegg's constituency, Sheffield, just a short distance from Barnsley where the party suffered the humiliation of coming sixth in the recent by-election. We'll be talking to the Liberal Democrat MP Chris Huhne about the state of morale in the party.

  • S2011E50 14/03/2011

    • March 14, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Engineers are racing to cool down a third reactor at a quake-stricken Japanese nuclear plant, after a second blast rocked the facility. Tonight, we ask how severe the nuclear emergency is, and what the implications are for the nuclear sector and energy mix worldwide. We are also examining the impact the earthquake and tsunami is likely to have on the Japanese economy and in turn on the worldwide recovery. Plus, with the pace of events on the ground in Libya outstripping any co-ordinated international response we ask whether this is a tipping point for the diplomatic community. And we have a report from Jeremy Bowen, filmed during his recent days in Tripoli, in which he draws his own conclusions about the uprising and subsequent civil war.

  • S2011E51 15/03/2011

    • March 15, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight we're devoting much of the programme to examining the middle class under pressure. For the first time in years this group - who had assumed that if the economy grew their income would grow - are finding this is no longer true. Wages are frozen, and the cost of living is soaring. Tonight our Economics editor Paul Mason reports from Sandwich in Kent where he meets people seeing the value of their wages, homes and pensions eroding and their prospects disappearing. Stephen Smith considers why so many people describe themselves as middle class nowadays. And we'll be joined live by MPs David Willetts and John Denham, and by people from different parts of the income scale - including a single parent who is being made redundant and a couple with two kids who rent their home and live off overdrafts. Plus Susan Watts, our Science editor, will update us on the situation at the Japanese quake-stricken nuclear plant where radiation levels are now at a level harmful to human health.

  • S2011E52 16/03/2011

    • March 16, 2011
    • BBC Two

    The British Foreign Office is now "suggesting that British nationals currently in Tokyo and to the north of Tokyo should consider leaving the area" because of fears over radiation leaks from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant - where engineers are racing to avert a nuclear catastrophe. Matt Frei will be assessing the mood of the people in the Japanese capital for us tonight, and we'll be joined live by the concert pianist Noriko Ogawa and the actress Haruka Kuroda. Then our Diplomatic editor Mark Urban will be asking why President Barack Obama is taking a back seat over the Libya no-fly zone, and we'll debate with former UK ambassador to the US, Sir Christopher Meyer and former diplomat and journalist, Jamie Rubin. And Iain Watson will report for us on the political dividing lines ahead of the Budget. Gavin Esler will be asking the shadow chancellor Ed Balls if Labour has an alternative strategy.

  • S2011E53 17/03/2011

    • March 17, 2011
    • BBC Two

    A draft United Nations Security Council resolution is to be put to a vote in New York tonight. If adopted it would authorise a no-fly zone over Libya and allow Arab states and others in co-operation with the UN to protect Libyan civilians, including in the rebel-held city of Benghazi. We will have the result of that vote and be getting reaction from a close Clinton ally in the US. Susan Watts will be reporting on efforts to deal with the crisis at the tsunami-hit Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in Japan, assessing what is happening on the ground and also what measures are being taken around the world. And with the events in Japan causing countries to reassess the safety of their own nuclear energy programmes, David Grossman looks at what this means for the prospects of an energy gap in Britain as we aim to meet electricity demands while also meeting deadlines to cut carbon emissions. Plus, remember Citizen Smith? Well he's back - not in the form of Robert Lindsay this time, but our correspondent Stephen Smith. Stephen has been to Big Society boot camp, undergoing training as a Big Society organiser ahead of the government's planned roll out this summer.

  • S2011E54 18/03/2011

    • March 18, 2011
    • BBC Two

    The focus of the programme will be the Libya conflict. Events are moving fast following last night's UN Security Council resolution authorising all necessary measures to protect civilians from attacks by Colonel Muammar Gaddafi's forces. In the face of Western powers discussing how to enforce the no-fly zone, Libya's government has declared an immediate ceasefire, with Foreign Minister Mussa Kussa saying that it was intended "to protect civilians". Tonight, Mark Urban will be bringing us up to date on the latest military plans, Michael Crick will be giving us political analysis of David Cameron's role in pushing for action and we will be discussing the crisis with guests in the studio.

  • S2011E55 21/03/2011

    • March 21, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Mark Urban reports on the strength of the coalition against Libya and who is doing what in the operation, and assesses whether Colonel Muammar Gaddafi is himself being targeted in the raids. We will be discussing the conflict with diplomat Sir Jeremy Greenstock and Foreign Office Minister Alistair Burt. And Michael Crick will report on the Commons debate and vote on the UK's involvement in the military action. Tim Whewell has a report on the unrest and political turmoil in Yemen, and we will be speaking to the Yemeni ambassador to the UN who has resigned. Plus David Grossman has a report on energy costs, whether we are paying too much and Ofgem's proposals for shaking the industry up.

  • S2011E56 22/03/2011

    • March 22, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight's programme will, unsurprisingly, focus on the conflict in Libya. We'll look at tensions within the hastily assembled multi-national coalition, and examine why this is one conflict that America is keen not to be seen to lead. Elsewhere, we'll try to find out what the real story behind the continuing protests in Bahrain is. And finally, ahead of tomorrow's budget, as the retail price index measure of inflation reaches its highest level in 20 years and with real wages similar to 2005 levels - the last time real wages fell over six years was in the 1920s - what does this mean for social aspirations?

  • S2011E57 23/03/2011

    • March 23, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight's Newsnight will be on for a full hour - from 10.30pm to 11.30pm - as we pick over the details of what Chancellor George Osborne announced in today's Budget. Iain Watson and Michael Crick will be taking us through the key measures, the political calculations behind the figures and possible flashpoints. Paul Mason will be taking a wide view of the measures and giving us his analysis of whether it is as the chancellor claims a "Budget for growth". We will be speaking live in the studio to Chief Secretary to the Treasury Danny Alexander, shadow chief secretary to the Treasury Angela Eagle, and the head of the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) Robert Chote. We will be assessing what kind of chancellor Mr Osborne is with former chancellor Lord Lamont and economists Ann Pettifor and Irwin Stelzer. And our Political Panel - Danny Finkelstein, Olly Grender and Peter Hyman - will be here to debate all that we have learned. Plus, following the news that actress Elizabeth Taylor has died, Stephen Smith will be looking back across her life on and off screen and we will be talking to fellow Oscar winner Julian Fellowes.

  • S2011E58 24/03/2011

    • March 24, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Portugal's parliament has rejected an austerity budget, prompting the resignation of Prime Minister Jose Socrates. An international bail-out, similar to those accepted by Greece and the Irish Republic last year, now looks far more likely. We'll be asking what Portugal can do without a prime minister, and what the implications might be for Euro-zone members, particularly Germany. As fighting in Libya continues in key cities, Colonel Muammar Gaddafi's tanks and artillery forces seem unstoppable, despite air strikes by international forces. How effective have the coalition forces been and how long might it take to stop Col Gaddafi's forces? And Matt Prodger has a report on the US soldier Bradley Manning, who is being held in solitary confinement in a US military prison - accused of leaking confidential documents to the Wikileaks website.

  • S2011E59 25/03/2011

    • March 25, 2011
    • BBC Two

    We look at what the fresh unrest in Syria and Yemen and the ongoing conflict in Libya means for al-Qaeda and militant Islam, and what used to be called the war on terror, both in the short and long term. Will militant Islam be side-lined by the broadly secular nature of many of the North African and Middle East protests or will events like the bombing of Libya be a radicalising element which presents an opportunity to Islamists? Richard Watson will be reporting on this issue and in the studio we will be speaking to a senior ex-CIA adviser on al-Qaeda who knew Osama Bin Laden. Ahead of tomorrow's trades union anti-cuts march we have a report the policing of activists and on the plans of some protesters with no connections to the TUC. Plus Michael Crick will be reporting on why the rally could present a problem for Labour.

  • S2011E60 28/03/2011

    • March 28, 2011
    • BBC Two

    As the rebels continue advancing west in Libya, our Diplomatic Editor Mark Urban will bring us up to date on the latest Coalition air raids that have hit Gaddafi's birthplace of Sirte, the next target for taking by the rebels. Meanwhile, Tim Whewell has been in the small city of Derna, which Gaddafi claimed was infiltrated with terrorists. He will bring us a report on what life is now like there for the people - many of who are enjoying a new liberation. We also have a fascinating film from Sue Lloyd-Roberts on how women are treated in Saudi Arabia. Sue looks at how women's freedom is restricted and how some are now quietly rebelling. And our Economics Editor Paul Mason looks at the aftermath of Saturday's protests in London against public spending cuts. Have we seen the end of the peaceful protest?

  • S2011E61 29/03/2011

    • March 29, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Strikes on Libya will continue until Col Gaddafi meets UN terms, stops attacking civilians and pulls back his forces, the US's Hillary Clinton has told the London conference of allied leaders. Tonight we'll talk to the Foreign Secretary William Hague. The London conference was intended to be a demonstration of unity but just how solid in reality is the coalition? Our Diplomatic Editor Mark Urban will bring us up to date with the day's events while out in Libya Tim Whewell will bring us a report from Derna, a town in the east from where more fighters went to join al-Qaeda in Iraq than anywhere else in the world. It highlights how little we know about the rebels and what could replace the Gaddafi regime. And our Science Editor Susan Watts will report on the latest CJD scare. Two separate incidents have emerged in which patients have been told they were put at risk of contracting the brain wasting disease - 38 patients have been warned in Wales and 21 in Essex. In both cases the fatal disease could have been picked up during surgery. Susan speaks to one of the patients affected and medical experts about the risk of contracting CJD from surgical instruments.

  • S2011E62 30/03/2011

    • March 30, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tim Whewell talks to General Suleiman Mahmoud of the Libyan rebel forces who tells him the rebels need weapons if they are to overthrow Colonel Gaddafi. He says with arms they could do the job in two weeks, but without it could take six months. The US President Barack Obama has said he does not rule out arming the rebels as government forces push them back. But any decision to supply arms to the rebels by the West would change the whole nature of the intervention. What would the implications be? We'll also be taking a close look at the arts and sciences. Which brings the most economic benefits to our society? We will have a film putting the case for each and a discussion with guests including Deborah Aydon, Executive Director of the Liverpool Everyman and Playhouse theatres and Imran Khan, Director of the Campaign for Science and Engineering in the UK And Ed Miliband is to marry in May. Why has he decided to tie the knot now ? And why will there be no best man (i.e. David) at his wedding?

  • S2011E63 31/03/2011

    • March 31, 2011
    • BBC Two

    We will take a closer look at Libyan Foreign Minister Moussa Koussa's decision to come to the UK - and at the man himself and role he played within the Gaddafi regime. Richard Watson will examine the possible benefits his defection will bring to the UK government and its allies, and the political and legal headaches too. Energy Secretary Chris Huhne and representatives of the oil and gas industry are meeting today to discuss the government's announcement in the Budget of a hike in taxes on the oil companies' windfall profits. Matt Prodger will report on that. Paul Mason will be taking us through the Irish bank stress test results, which will be released later today. And Stephen Smith's transformation into Big Society activist Citizen Smith finally begins today, having been pushed back in our schedule by the Libya conflict.

  • S2011E64 01/04/2011

    • April 1, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tim Whewell has managed to secure a rare interview with the Libyan rebel leader Mustafa Abdel Jalil. He says they'll accept a ceasefire if Colonel Gaddafi pulls his troops out of Libyan cities under rebel control. But they will not back down on their demand that Colonel Gaddafi must go. As officials in Japan say the evacuation of residents near the quake-hit Fukushima nuclear plant will be long-term, we ask what the catastrophe means for nuclear power. We'll have the pro-nuclear environmental writer George Monbiot and Jeremy Leggett who is founder and Executive Chairman of Solarcentury which seeks to harness the power of the sun. Plus we'll have our Political Editor Michael Crick who has been with the Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg on the pro-AV campaign trail. How will the coalition cope with a referendum result going either way?

  • S2011E81 28/04/2011

    • April 28, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight as President Obama reshuffles his cabinet we look at the implications for the Arab Spring. A battle over defence cuts is expected but if the main Western powers pull back from the region, what does that mean for the Arab world and the rest of us? We'll be talking to PJ Crowley, the former US state department spokesman about how sustainable Western involvement is. We'll have other guests too. We also have a film about Yemen where President Ali Abdullah Saleh has agreed to step down within 30 days. The US, worried about terrorism, has poured military aid into the country but it is claimed that some has been used by the country's leadership to repress any opposition. And ahead of the Royal Wedding, the American TV networks are getting ready for wall to wall coverage. Why are Americans so fascinated by the Royals?

  • S2011E82 Royal Wedding Special

    • April 29, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Friday's nuptials may have meant an extra day off for many, but not for Kirsty Wark who will be presenting a royal wedding edition of Newsnight at our usual time of 10.30pm. Kirsty will be joined in the studio by guests Simon Schama, Will Self, Rowan Pelling, Plum Sykes and Nicky Haslam who will be discussing the events of the day and their impact. Does the wedding feel in tune with the current mood of the country, or hopelessly out of step? Has this been a welcome break from the atmosphere of austerity or an outrageous expense at a time of belt tightening? And what of the bride and groom? To what effect do William and Kate define Britishness today and what effect will they have on how the monarchy is viewed? All that and more will be up for debate. The programme kicks off with a report from Michael Crick who will have spent the day down at Buckingham Palace talking to the crowds who have gathered there. And Stephen Smith is heading to Gloucester to a neighbourhood which hosted a fantastic street party when Charles and Diana married in 1981, but which took some encouragement and help from Big Society organiser Citizen Smith to get in the party mood this time round.

  • SPECIAL 0x5 Death of Osama Bin Laden

    • May 2, 2011
    • BBC Two

    A Newsnight special with response to the death of Osama Bin Laden, broadcast on the BBC News Channel

  • S2011E83 03/05/2011

    • May 3, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight our Diplomatic editor Mark Urban will be asking where the killing of al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden by US forces leaves the war on terror. We'll speak live to George W Bush's Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff. We have the first in a series of films hearing testimony from people who were caught up in the 7/7 bombings in London in 2005, and we'll debate if there is now an increased risk of further terrorist attacks here in the UK following Bin Laden's death. Paul Mason is in Cairo and has been considering how the Arab Spring fits into the story. Where is the Arab world facing politically now and might a less brutal face of political Islam emerge? Read more on Paul's blog. Matt Frei is in Washington where he asks people how the extraordinary events of yesterday have changed the public perception of President Barack Obama and will it propel him to a second term? And Iain Watson reports on the confrontation between the energy secretary and the prime minister at a cabinet meeting over the No campaign's claims in the alternative vote referendum. George Osborne reportedly told Chris Huhne that the Cabinet was no place for a "Jeremy Paxman interview".

  • S2011E84 04/05/2011

    • May 4, 2011
    • BBC Two

    We have the second in our series of extraordinary films on the 7/7 terror attacks in London, in which people caught up in the 7/7 terror bombings in London recount how the attacks unfolded. If you missed Tuesday's film on the Circle Line attack you can watch it here. On the eve of elections around the country we look at what is at stake for our political parties and who the winners and losers are likely to be. We will be taking a close look at the Egyptian-mediated reconciliation pact between rival Palestinian factions Fatah and Hamas, asking what it means for the prospect of peace in the Middle East. Jeremy has an interview with new BBC Trust chairman Lord Patten. And with the debate about whether a picture of Osama Bin Laden's body should be released we ask why it is so important to see such pictures and look back at some of the famous images of fallen foes from Mussolini to Saddam Hussein.

  • S2011E85 05/05/2011

    • May 5, 2011
    • BBC Two

    We have the third in our series of extraordinary films on the 7/7 terror attacks in London, in which people caught up in the bombings recount how the attacks unfolded and changed their lives forever. If you missed Wednesday's film on the Edgware Road attack you can watch it here. Newsnight has an exclusive interview with a former colleague of the 7/7 bombers' leader, Mohammed Sidique Khan, which sheds new light on the crucial years before the bombings when he was living in Leeds. We'll also be examining the legality of the US operation that killed al-Qaeda head Osama Bin Laden in Pakistan. Could Britain have undertaken something similar? And voters across the UK are going to the polls in a series of national and local elections as well as a referendum to decide the way MPs are elected. We'll have a report from Scotland on the elections for the parliament and Michael Crick will take a look at the alternative vote referendum.

  • SPECIAL 0x6 Verdict on 7/7

    • May 6, 2011
    • BBC Two

    We start at 7.30pm with Jeremy presenting a special programme on the verdict of the 7/7 London bombings inquest. Richard Watson will be presenting the main findings of the inquiry for us, which has formally ruled that the 52 people who died in the suicide attacks were unlawfully killed. All throughout this week we've been hearing accounts from survivors and relatives of each of the attacks that took place that day in the capital and tonight we have the final film in that remarkable series, plus we'll be joined in the studio by some of the people who contributed to those films to discuss if the inquiry is going to provide some closure for them.

  • S2011E86 06/05/2011

    • May 6, 2011
    • BBC Two

    In a special hour-long programme at 10.30pm, we'll be analysing the results of the UK local, Welsh, Scottish and AV polls. Our political editor Michael Crick will bring us the latest on the AV result which is still coming in, and will be assessing where heavy losses for the Lib Dems in England, significant wins for the SNP in Scotland, and the Conservatives holding ground in England all leaves British politics. David Grossman is in Bristol asking Lib Dem grassroots supporters how their party blew their big chance to get electoral reform, and what they should do now in coalition. Iain Watson reports from Edinburgh on the SNP's surge to Holyrood victory. And we'll be joined by Danny Finkelstein, Olly Grender and Peter Hyman to chew over the events of the day.

  • S2011E87 09/05/2011

    • May 9, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Nick Clegg has said that protecting the NHS is now his number one priority, claiming that "no bill is better than a bad bill". Meanwhile, one of his own MPs says the whole NHS reform exercise ought to be "stopped rather than paused". Tonight Michael Crick will be examining the politics of this - one of the most radical plans in the history of the health service - and Paul Mason will be asking if the opportunity to really reform the NHS has been lost for this generation. Stephen Smith goes in search of the flat white drinking, Guardian reading, progressive North London "commentariat" who voted 'yes' in last week's referendum on the alternative vote. Jeremy will be asking the former US assistant secretary of defence Joseph Nye what power is. And Will Gompertz meets film maker Terry Gilliam - the man who ran away from Minnesota to join Monty Python's Flying Circus - to find out how he got on with his operatic directorial debut, The Damnation of Faust for the ENO.

  • S2011E88 10/05/2011

    • May 10, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tomorrow marks the first anniversary since the UK coalition government came to power. Tonight, we look at how the relationship between the Conservative and Liberal Democrats is faring and what the strategy is for both parties now, one year on. Plus we'll be joined by some political elders in debate. Then we have a film from Finland where we've met Timo Soini, the leader of right-wing, anti-immigration, nationalist party the True Finns. Last month the party, which opposes EU bailouts, took nearly a fifth of votes in the country's general election. And we will be examining the impact of ex-motorsports boss Max Mosley's failed bid in the European Court of Human Rights to force newspapers to warn people before exposing their private lives, and Mr Mosley will be joining us on the programme.

  • S2011E89 11/05/2011

    • May 11, 2011
    • BBC Two

    If it ever came to fruition we are still a long way from Scottish Independence, but if it did happen what would an independent Scotland look like? Jackie Long is digging through what the SNP has said in the past and will be reporting from Edinburgh tonight. Lyse Doucet has a film on the ambivalent attitude of Pakistanis towards Bin Laden. And we look at the phenomenon of Slut Walks - is this a wise response to the offensive comments of a Canadian policeman, and can the word "slut" be reclaimed? We will be discussing.

  • S2011E90 12/05/2011

    • May 12, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight on Newsnight we will be joined live in the studio by UK Chancellor George Osborne and French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde as we focus on the problems at the heart of the Eurozone. Our Economics editor Paul Mason will present his thesis on why EU governments and bureaucracy have mishandled the sovereign debt crisis, imposing unrealistic penalties on the population to save the banks in their own heartlands. And Paul will be giving us his thoughts on what Mr Osborne and Ms Lagarde tell us. We also have an interview with Kate and Gerry McCann, whose daughter disappeared while on a family holiday in Portugal four years ago, about the book Mrs McCann has written on their ordeal and ongoing efforts to locate Madeleine. Then our Science editor Susan Watts has the story of the secret US embassy cables released by Wikileaks which show nations are racing to "carve up" Arctic resources - oil, gas and even rubies - as the ice retreats (read more here). And Iain Watson has the latest on the news that the Lib Dem MP David Laws is to be suspended from the Commons for seven days over his expenses claims, which he used to pay rent to his partner and for building work and telephone bills.

  • S2011E91 13/05/2011

    • May 13, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Every day this week there seems to have been a big story in the news about the relationship between openness and personal privacy. Tonight David Grossman will be investigating what we should be allowed to know, and we'll be joined by a panel of journalists, lawyers and others to debate privacy laws, super injunctions and Twitter revelations. Then historian and author of England's Mistress, Kate Williams will be doing an authored piece asking what all these sex scandals tell us about 21st Century sexual behaviour in Britain.

  • S2011E92 16/05/2011

    • May 16, 2011
    • BBC Two

    The head of the IMF, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, is appearing in court in New York to face charges of sexual assault. Mr Strauss-Kahn, who had been seen as a contender in France's 2012 presidential election, denies allegations that he tried to rape a hotel maid on Saturday. His appearance had been delayed for forensic tests to be carried out. Meanwhile, another allegation against Mr Strauss-Kahn has emerged. A French writer says she may file a complaint for an alleged sexual assault in 2002. Tonight Peter Marshall will consider what impact this news will have on the political and cultural life of France, and we'll be joined in debate by French commentators Esther Leneman and Agnes Poirier. Then Michael Crick will be asking if Lib Dem cabinet minister Chris Huhne is politically finished. A senior detective has been tasked with investigating claims he asked someone else to take his penalty points for a 2003 speeding offence, Essex Police say. And on the day when the first coded bomb threat warning outside Northern Ireland has been received in a decade, Liz Mackean reports on Queen Elizabeth II's visit to Dublin tomorrow, when she'll become the first monarch to set foot in the Republic since George V. We hope to be joined by Lord Major, the former prime minister credited with establishing the Northern Ireland Peace Process in the early 1990s.

  • S2011E93 17/05/2011

    • May 17, 2011
    • BBC Two

    What would have happened if Osama Bin Laden had been captured rather than killed? Tonight we'll hear the case against Bin Laden, and we'll explore the different legal scenarios that could have ensued if the Al-Qaeda leader had been taken alive. We'll hear from advocates of each of the three scenarios what the pros and cons of each would be. Then we'll be joined live from Islamabad by Lyse Doucet who'll be asking if the US and Pakistan can successfully work together when there's little trust left between them. And our Diplomatic editor Mark Urban will join us live from Washington from where he'll explain why the current crisis in relations between the two countries is the most difficult since 9/11. Tonight's guests include Judge Michael Mukasey, US attorney general under President George W Bush (2007-9), and Benjamin Ferencz, the 91-year-old former prosecutor at the Nuremberg War Crimes Trials.

  • S2011E94 18/05/2011

    • May 18, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Recent polling by Lord Ashcroft suggested that there is a growing rift between the Conservative party and the public on the issue of crime. Tonight we look at whether the outcry over Ken Clarke's comments about rape and the row over Theresa May's proposals to cut the police budget are the latest signs that the Conservatives are out of touch on law and order. Also, when David Cameron came into power he adopted a chairman style of leadership, giving his ministers a large dose of autonomy and not micro-managing every department - but is this approach now getting the coalition into difficulties and does he need to tighten his grip? Plus, we follow the story of a man who has voluntarily had an impaired hand amputated so he can be fitted with a bionic limb and we will be discussing elective amputations with a man who has been fitted with a similar prosthesis. And we speak to David Brooks, New York Times columnist and author of "The Social Animal", a current hot read in Whitehall.

  • S2011E95 19/05/2011

    • May 19, 2011
    • BBC Two

    We learned today that the Coalition has decided against introducing a Privacy Act to address concerns about injunctions, and that hot topic of discussion, super injunctions. The decision became known on the day that an order granting anonymity to ex-Royal Bank of Scotland boss Sir Fred Goodwin was lifted at the High Court. The lifting was triggered by House of Lords member Lord Stoneham using parliamentary privilege to reveal details of the gag order to peers. Tonight will debate whether this is a good day for freedom of speech or a bad day for human rights with the man who forced the move, Lord Stoneham, with a former judge who has imposed injunctions and with Max Mosley who has been pushing for a tightening of the law to protect individuals' privacy. Mark Urban will be giving us his thoughts on President Barack Obama's speech on the Arab Spring and we will be hearing from Middle East Quartet representative Tony Blair. Tim Whewell reports from Cairo on how recent upheavals have upset all the old certainties in the region and how Egypt's approach to Israel, the peace process and regional alliances has changed. And following the row over Justice Secretary Ken Clark's remarks about rape yesterday, Liz MacKean will be considering if the law needs to take a completely different approach to the crime. And we will discuss whether Mr Clarke was right to say there are different types of rape with Deborah Orr who says there are and a rape victim counsellor who says he is wrong.

  • S2011E96 20/05/2011

    • May 20, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight, we lead on the news that a professional footballer has obtained a disclosure order against the social networking site Twitter. The application seeks the disclosure of the identities of a number of Twitter users who had been responsible for the publication of confidential information about him. Then we'll be looking into the story that the Rwandan government is masterminding an alleged assassination plot in this country against dissidents critical of the Rwandan regime. And as Dominique Strauss-Kahn is granted bail by a judge in New York after being formally charged with trying to rape a hotel maid, we'll consider who might be in line for his former job heading up the IMF.

  • S2011E97 23/05/2011

    • May 23, 2011
    • BBC Two

    An MP has defied the judiciary today by naming Ryan Giggs as the married footballer at the centre of a media gagging order. David Cameron has said that banning newspapers from naming such stars while the information was widely available on the internet was both "unsustainable" and "unfair" - but what is the answer? Are new laws required? Or can the press be trusted to regulate itself? Tonight we hear from the head of the Press Complaints Commission, the MP at the centre of the row, and a lawyer who has secured injunctions in the past. Then Justin Rowlatt reports from China on the difficulties men there are having finding partners if they do not first own property. Justin finds the situation is significantly impacting on the economy as men choose to save rather than splurge. And our Science editor Susan Watts is keeping an eye on the ash cloud from the Grimsvotn volcano in Iceland, which is expected to reach the UK by the early hours of Tuesday morning, the Met Office has said.

  • S2011E98 24/05/2011

    • May 24, 2011
    • BBC Two

    President Barack Obama has met Queen Elizabeth at Buckingham Palace at the start of his state visit to Britain. Later he will have a brief meeting with Prime Minister David Cameron, although their more substantive talks are scheduled for Wednesday. Tonight Mark Urban look at what will be topping the agenda at those talks and what both leaders will be hoping to achieve in them. Peter Marshall is focussed on Glencore which floated on the stock exchange today. He will be telling us more about this vast company - the world's largest diversified commodities trader - what it does and how it works. The ongoing fight by local communities to save their libraries will be shown in force tonight at Kensal Green, with writer Alan Bennett leading the charge. Stephen Smith is off to meet him. And we have an interview with porn baron Larry Flynt who will be talking about the connection between power and sex outlined in his new book One Nation Under Sex, a history of political sex scandals.

  • S2011E99 25/05/2011

    • May 25, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Barack Obama and David Cameron have said Colonel Gaddafi will ultimately be forced out of power and Libya's people allowed to "choose their own future". At a joint press conference in London, the UK prime minister vowed to "turn up the heat" on the regime in Tripoli amid suggestions of deadlock on the ground. Tonight Mark Urban considers what the diplomatic strategy for Libya is now. Jeremy has been to meet the former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf. Jeremy asks him if he was surprised that the Al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden was found living inside Pakistan. See that interview in full later. As the coalition appoints pro-abstinence charity Life to an advisory group on sexual health, we'll debate if the government's Christian moral approach to sex education and abortion is a good thing or not. And Stephen Smith dons his scarlet matador's cape and travels to Spain where the Catalan parliament has banned the country's most emblematic pastime. Stephen finds that though the bullfighting ban has brought relief to animal rights activists, people are deeply concerned that an important part of the culture and tradition of Spain's nationalist heartland will be lost.

  • S2011E100 26/05/2011

    • May 26, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight we lead on the news that Ratko Mladic, wanted for genocide during the Bosnian war in the 1990s, has been arrested in Serbia and that moves to extradite him to The Hague tribunal have begun. Gen Mladic, the most prominent Bosnian war crimes suspect at large since the arrest of Radovan Karadzic in 2008, faces charges over the massacre of at least 7,500 Bosnian Muslim men and boys at Srebrenica in 1995. What will his arrest mean for reconciliation in the country and region? And does it open the door to membership of the European Union for Serbia? Tonight our guests to discuss the matter include Serbian ambassador to the UK, Dr Dejan Popovic, Bosnian writer Zlata Filipovic, whose book Zlata's Diary chronicled the horrors of war in Sarajevo where she lived, and International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) prosecutor Sir Geoffrey Nice. Also, we have a film from Catrin Nye who has been to the Greater Manchester town of Oldham 10 years after riots between white and Asian communities. Despite efforts to bring the two communities together over the last decade she finds that many are still leading parallel lives, and some are predicting more conflict ahead. Afterwards we will be joined in the studio by people from Oldham to discuss the film's findings and what needs to change.

  • S2011E101 27/05/2011

    • May 27, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Sharon Shoesmith, the former director of children's services for Haringey, North London, has won her Court of Appeal battle over her sacking following the Baby Peter tragedy. Judges said that the-then education secretary Ed Balls and her employers, Haringey Council, had been "procedurally unfair" when they sacked her three years ago. Baby Peter Connelly, who had been seen 60 times by social services, was found dead in 2007 with over 50 injuries. Tonight we will talk to Ed Balls, and will discuss whether in the rush to find a scapegoat for the Baby Peter tragedy opportunities to reform social services were lost. Also amid the news that Fifa President Sepp Blatter has been placed under investigation by the organisation's ethics committee over accusations he failed to report the payment of alleged bribes we ask if this is the moment football cleans up.

  • S2011E102 31/05/2011

    • May 31, 2011
    • BBC Two

    The Football Association and the Scottish Football Association have called for Fifa to postpone its presidential election. Current president Sepp Blatter is the only candidate for the 1 June election after Mohamed Bin Hammam's withdrawal. Peter Marshall will have the latest on the Fifa crisis for us tonight. Justin Rowlatt visits the world's biggest polluter, China, to find out if it really can boom without poisoning the planet. Then David Grossman considers Angela Merkel's decision to phase out nuclear power stations in Germany by 2022. And as increasing numbers of people decide that property is now so scarce and its cost so high that they may never own their own place, Jeremy is joined by property expert Kirstie Allsopp to discuss how that possibility might change us.

  • S2011E103 01/06/2011

    • June 1, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Nato's Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen has said that Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi's departure from power is "only a matter of time". Tonight we hear from the BBC's Andrew North who has spent the past few weeks in Tripoli. We have a film from our correspondent Tim Whewell who is in Egypt - where a court has set a date for the trial of former President Hosni Mubarak and his two sons, Alaa and Gamal. Tim has travelled to the Sinai peninsula, the wilderness area that separates Africa and Asia, which he finds is awash with arms and increasingly unstable since the uprising which toppled Mr Mubarak in February. Read more about that here. And Jeremy will be speaking to Booker prize winning author turned political campaigner, Arundhati Roy.

  • S2011E104 02/06/2011

    • June 2, 2011
    • BBC Two

    With more doubts raised today on the government's ability to control immigration, one group who are being targeted are students who wish to study here. But can the UK afford to turn many of them away? Tonight we will debate whether the crackdown on student visas keeps the best and the brightest out, or simply closes one big immigration loophole. As the E-Coli bug claims more victims Susan Watts reports on how worried should we be about this new and powerful strain, and we talk to Professor Hugh Pennington, who led inquiries into two E-Coli outbreaks in the UK. And 1980s architecture - iconic buildings like London's Broadgate Centre and the Law Courts in Truro - is starting to turn 30. Love them or loathe them, this means they can now apply for listed heritage status. But should they be saved? Tonight we have an authored film from Wayne Hemingway on the proposed listing of iconic and controversial early '80s developments. Before you see that film, check out this classic piece of BBC archive we've uncovered of Prince Charles talking about 1980s architecture.

  • S2011E105 03/06/2011

    • June 3, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Panorama's programme detailing the abuse of residents in a Bristol care home and the news that Southern Cross has slashed its rent payments in an effort to keep its 750 residential homes for the elderly running have this week thrown a new spotlight on the provision of care for vulnerable members of society. Tonight we focus on the kind of care which should be available and who should pay for it with a report from Peter Marshall and a discussion with guests including Joan Bakewell, John Redwood and Ray King from Bupa. We also focus on another of the stories of the week - morality in sport - following the news that the Bahrain Grand Prix has been reinstated. The race, originally due to be held on 13 March, was called off in February because of pro-democracy protests in which more than 20 people have died. Is it right that it will be back on the F1 calendar in October?

  • S2011E106 06/06/2011

    • June 6, 2011
    • BBC Two

    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has concluded that no changes are needed to UK economic policy. It said weak economic growth and rising inflation had been "unexpected", but said they were "largely temporary". It pointed to rising commodity prices and the increase in VAT as temporary problems for inflation. Our Economics editor Paul Mason has been blogging on this subject and you can watch more from him on tonight's programme, when we'll also have interviews with the interim boss of the IMF, John Lipsky (watch a clip here), and the shadow chancellor Ed Balls. Then, as Nintendo becomes the latest company to suffer an online security breach due to an attack by hackers, the BBC's technology correspondent Rory Cellan-Jones investigates how much we put our own personal data at risk by storing it on servers and hard drives that are not our own. Read more on the dot.Rory blog here. Ahead of the publication tomorrow of the government's revised Prevent counter-terrorism strategy, the Home Secretary Theresa May has accused universities of "complacency" in tackling Islamist extremism. Richard Watson is in Nottingham and has more on this story for us this evening.

  • S2011E107 07/06/2011

    • June 7, 2010
    • BBC Two

    Tonight we're leading on NHS reforms and we'll be hearing from key players in the coalition and public and private health practitioners. Then we've done a Wife-Swap style parenting experiment in which a family who use strict "Chinese" style parenting methods switch mother with a family who have a more relaxed Western approach. And we'll be joined live by "Tiger Mother" author Amy Chua + Mumsnet co-founder Justine Roberts to discuss the merits of different parenting styles.

  • S2011E108 08/06/2011

    • June 8, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Richard Watson has the latest on the story that the Crown Prosecution Service has opened an inquiry after claims prosecutors withheld undercover police officer Mark Kennedy's surveillance tapes from defence lawyers. Our economics editor Paul Mason will be asking what can we do about banks. Mark Urban will bring us the amazing story of the Syrian blogger, A Gay Girl in Damascus, who is missing. And Stephen Smith has been to meet iconoclastic choreographer Michael Clark whose latest work - which fills the Tate Modern's Turbine Hall - uses professional dancers alongside volunteering members of the public, and which Clark says embodies the punk spirit for which he first became famous.

  • S2011E109 09/06/2011

    • June 9, 2011
    • BBC Two

    The Crown Prosecution Service has launched an independent inquiry following Newsnight's revelations last night that they didn't disclose material which might have saved people from convictions. It follows Richard Watson's investigation showing how the CPS broke its own rules on disclosure of evidence in the case of six activists accused of planning to shut down a Nottinghamshire power station in 2009. The group had been infiltrated by a police informer Mark Kennedy. Religion and Politics - The Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, has written a devastating critique of the coalition's performance in government - even questioning the strength of their mandate, arguing: "with remarkable speed, we are being committed to radical, long term policies for which no one voted". We'll ask cabinet minister Iain Duncan Smith if Rowan Williams is right in what he says and who has the moral high ground in this debate. We also have a very strong film from Tim Whewell in Gaza on the Arab spring. The desire for change is strong but there seems to be no means to deliver it.

  • S2011E110 10/06/2011

    • June 10, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight we'll be looking at the future of the Labour Party under Ed Miliband. How is he shaping up as a leader and what are his plans for the party? Leaked documents which detail efforts by Gordon Brown and his allies to speed up Tony Blair's exit from office after the 2005 election have emerged, reminding us of former divisions in the party. Can Ed Miliband unify his troops and outline a convincing vision for Labour? We'll hear from a senior ally of Ed Miliband and we'll be speaking to Arnie Graf, the US community organiser and mentor of the young Barack Obama, who's been appointed by Mr Miliband to conduct a review of Labour's organisation and campaign structures. How can Labour learn from community activism in the US? We'll also be discussing whether the death knell has sounded for Nato after outgoing US Defence Secretary Robert Gates said it faced a dim, if not dismal future. Plus the latest on Sarah Palin's emails that are being released by the state of Alaska.

  • S2011E111 13/06/2011

    • June 13, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Microsoft tycoon Bill Gates has pledged $1bn to help vaccinate children around the world against preventable diseases like pneumonia. He's hosting a summit in London where countries are being asked to give an extra £2.3bn ($3.7bn) by 2015 for child vaccines. We speak to Mr Gates about his plans and hear from those who disagree with his approach.

  • SPECIAL 0x7 Choosing to Die: Newsnight Debate

    • June 13, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Following the BBC Two documentary at 9pm tonight entitled Terry Pratchett: Choosing To Die, Newsnight have an interview with Mr Pratchett and Jeremy Paxman chairs a debate about the controversial issues surrounding assisted dying. Our guests in the studio will be David Aaronovitch, Dr Erika Preisig, Debbie Purdy, Dinah Rose QC, Liz Carr and The Rt Revd Michael Langrish Bishop of Exeter. Aired 2011-06-13

  • S2011E112 14/06/2011

    • June 14, 2011
    • BBC Two

    The government has agreed to make the main changes to its controversial NHS reforms in England that were recommended by an independent review. David Cameron said ministers had listened to fears about increased competition and more powers for GPs and would now slow the pace of change. Tonight we look at what is left of the bold, radical plan for reform that Health Secretary Andrew Lansley was convinced existed as recently as January, and we will ask him how he feels about the changes. Also, as the government admits it cannot force councils in England to provide weekly bin collections, we look at the tension between the centralised and devolved government. And Stephen Smith has been to Belgium to see Big Society in action on a grand scale in Brussels, where volunteers of every stripe take part in an annual city clean-up day.

  • S2011E113 15/06/2011

    • June 15, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Which will have a bigger impact on the 21st Century, the global financial crisis or the Arab Spring? And can the events even be separated out? Tonight we look at both events. We have an interview with Nato Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen, as concern at the international community's failure to make a breakthrough in the Libyan conflict looks to be growing. We will also be talking to Britain's Foreign Secretary William Hague, who has again ruled out military intervention to protect Syrian civilians of the kind recently undertaken in Libya. Paul Mason is on the frontline of the financial crisis - today's austerity protests in Athens. You can read his reports in his blog - and tonight he will be live on the programme. And we will be discussing links between the Arab Spring and financial crisis with Black Swan author Nassim Nicholas Taleb and economist and writer Noreena Hertz. And then it is time for something completely different as we turn our attention to the lunar eclipse - the first total lunar eclipse of 2011 and the longest in nearly 11 years - with amateur astronomer and professional Brian Cox impersonator Jon Culshaw and space scientist Maggie Aderin Pocock.

  • S2011E114 16/06/2011

    • June 16, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou is set to announce a new cabinet amid tough austerity measures, as MPs from his party convene an emergency meeting. Will this be enough to ease the fears that Greece will default on its debt which have shaken markets and to end the unrest on the streets? Paul Mason is in Athens and will bring us the latest tonight. We will also be looking at the promotion of Ayman al-Zawahiri to al-Qaeda leader and reports from the US the Sun is entering a period of "hibernation" with far fewer sunspots than had been expected. And we have a film on the influential work of Collier Campbell; the award-winning textile design company which turns 50 this year.

  • S2011E115 17/06/2011

    • June 17, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Paul Mason is still in Greece this morning and is out and about gauging response to Prime Minister George Papandreou's attempt to push through unpopular austerity measures demanded by the EU through the appointment of a new finance minister. We will have his film tonight and also by the time we go to air Paul should be back with us and live on the programme with a report on how worried the rest of the eurozone and the UK should be by the crisis. Also, with a photograph of a couple kissing amid the Vancouver riots, we ask what it takes to make an iconic image.

  • S2011E116 20/06/2011

    • June 20, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight on the programme we have an exclusive report from inside Syria by one of our reporters, who has just returned from a week undercover in the capital Damascus spent meeting opposition activists who are leading the anti-government protests. We hear powerful testimony about what is really happening on the ground in Syria's revolution. Michael Crick will have the latest on government plans to make women wait longer for their state pension. And we ask if we are living in an over sexualised society, and if so whether that is necessarily a problem. Are double standards in the media to blame? Should the government be intervening, or do we need a new kind of feminism to respond? Our guests include Caitlin Moran, whose new book, How To Be a Woman, attempts to reclaim feminism in a deliberately non-academic way, Brooke Magnanti, author of the call girl blog Belle du Jour, and Kat Banyard, author of The Equality Illusion and founder of UK Feminista - an organisation supporting grassroots feminist activism.

  • S2011E117 21/06/2011

    • June 21, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight Sue Lloyd-Roberts goes undercover in the Syrian capital Damascus to speak to opposition activists there about the anti-government protests, the regime's response and what the demonstrators hope to achieve. Then our Economics editor Paul Mason considers if the likelihood of banking contagion if Greece defaults has been overblown. Amid claims of a government U-turn Michael Crick is looking at sentencing, and technology correspondent Rory Cellan Jones asks if the personalisation of the web could limit our access to information, enclosing us in a self-reinforcing world view and making our social circles more homogeneous.

  • S2011E118 22/06/2011

    • June 22, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight we'll be hearing testimony from the British Syrian commnunity who say that protesters outside the embassy in London are being threatened, as are their family members back at home in Syria. We go undercover for an investigation into a group of faith healers who claim they have miracle cures for cancer and HIV. And Iain Watson has the latest on the House of Lords reforms.

  • S2011E119 23/06/2011

    • June 23, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Michael Crick is in Brussels for us tonight where the threat of a Greek debt default undermining the euro is overshadowing an EU summit. Paul Mason will be asking how an economy like Greece's can be saved from going bust (read more on his blog), and we'll be speaking to Werner Hoyer, the German Foreign Office's Europe Minister. And Iain Watson has the latest on the attempt to ban the use of wild animals in circuses in England.

  • S2011E120 24/06/2011

    • June 24, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight, we have an exclusive with hacking collective LulzSec, who have been explaining their agenda to Susan Watts. And off the back of that piece we will be talking to former US head of Homeland Security Michael Chertoff and James Lyne - a computer expert who hacks for security companies to test their security. Tim Whewell has an update on our story this week that Syrians protesting against the Assad regime in London say they have been intimidated by officials from their home country. Plus, what does the news that home furnishings retailer Habitat has gone into administration, with only three British stores assured of survival, say about Britain's sense of style today? We will be speaking to designer and Habitat's former style director Tom Dixon and the Editor of Elle Decoration Magazine, Michelle Ogundehin. And Michael Crick is still in Brussels where European Union leaders have gathered for a second day of summit talks dominated by the Greek debt crisis, which is threatening the stability of the 17-nation eurozone. UK Prime Minister David Cameron said today that he had received assurances that Britain would not be called upon to contribute to EU financial support for Greece. Tonight Michael will ask if this is the moment that Britain should redefine its relationship with Brussels and the Union.

  • S2011E121 27/06/2011

    • June 27, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight David Grossman will be asking where public opinion is on the planned strikes over pensions that are due to take place on Thursday, when teachers and civil servants are due to walk out causing widespread disruption. Then we have front-line reportage from Andrew Harding who is in the besieged city of Misrata in Libya. As Liam Fox vows to bring budgets "under control" at the Ministry of Defence in an overhaul likely to see a cut in the number of senior officers, Mark Urban explains what the reorganisation might like look like. And Matt Frei delivers his valedictory essay for Newsnight in which he asks if the US is in long term decline, and we discuss if the 21st Century might really be the Chinese century.

  • S2011E122 28/06/2011

    • June 28, 2011
    • BBC Two

    A planned shake-up of higher education in England, being set out to MPs, aims to increase competition and give consumer powers to students. We'll speak to the Universities Minister David Willetts about that later. Police have fired tear gas in running battles with stone-throwing youths in Athens, where a 48-hour general strike is being held against a parliamentary vote on tough austerity measures. Paul Mason is there and we'll get the latest from him tonight. Meanwhile, you can read his thoughts on his blog. Then Mark Urban considers what went wrong with the project to upgrade the Kajaki dam in Helmand Province that was supposed to bring electricity to millions of Afghans. A quest into which lives and money have been poured, the turbine remains unassembled, exposed to the elements and overgrown with weeds, three years after being brought to the site by the British military. Read more here. And Johann Hari, interviewer and columnist with the Independent, has admitted inserting quotes into his interviews that were not from the original interview itself. We'll be discussing if that's plagiarism - or harmless journalistic sleight of hand .

  • S2011E123 29/06/2011

    • June 29, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Greek MPs have voted in favour of unpopular austerity measures aimed at saving the country from defaulting on its debt. So is that the end of the crisis? Our economics editor Paul Mason assesses the likely outcome as protests continue on the street. Read Paul's blog. And while Greece is preparing for some major belt tightening, the European Union is looking to ask its member states for more cash - going against the wishes of David Cameron who had called on the EU to exercise some belt tightening of its own. The UK Border Agency has been facing criticism after managing to let into the country a man who had been banned. It wasn't as if he sneaked in. Sheikh Salah, who has Israeli citizenship and is the leader of the Islamic Movement in Israel, arrived under his own name and his visit had been announced in advance. He went on to address public meetings before the police arrested him. Richard Watson will have a report for us. And our political editor Michael Crick is in Inverclyde ahead of Thursday's by-election. The seat has traditionally been held by Labour but after the SNP's success in the Scottish Parliament elections, Alex Salmond's party is hoping to pull off a win. Michael will bring us the latest as the campaign ends.

  • S2011E124 30/06/2011

    • June 30, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Hundreds of thousands of public sector workers have gone on strike across the UK over planned pension changes. Tonight David Grossman, who has been out on the streets of London with protesters, examines the proposals for public service pensions and we'll hear from the government, Unions and the Labour Party. Meanwhile, Anna Adams has spent the day in Kent hearing from parents, pupils and teachers about how today's one day strike has affected them. Then we'll take a brief look at the history of British industrial disputes, and discuss what the political consequences of more strikes are likely to be with our political panel. And Sue Lloyd Roberts has another report for us from Syria - this time about how the revolution there kicked off and what role cyber activism played in it.

  • S2011E125 01/07/2011

    • July 1, 2011
    • BBC Two

    On the day that the Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari meets Prime Minister David Cameron, Richard Watson considers how secure Pakistan's nuclear weapons are - and whether the US might take pre-emptive steps to stop them falling into the hands of terrorists. We'll be joined by the Pakistani High Commissioner to Britain, Wajid Shamsul Hasan. Former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn has been released from house arrest amid doubts about the credibility of his accuser. We'll ask if he could still be a candidate for the French presidency - leading American lawyer Alan Dershowitz and DSK's biographer Michel Taubmann will discuss. And we're keeping a close eye on the tennis - is Andy Murray's dream of a Wimbledon final dying?

  • S2011E126 Scottish Independence

    • July 4, 2011
    • BBC Two

    In a special edition of Newsnight tonight we're exploring different attitudes towards the notions of Britishness and national identity, and to Scottish independence. We'll analyse the findings of a survey which found that almost 50% of voters in England want Scotland to remain part of the UK - read the rest of the findings here. Allan Little will consider the role of the British state in the Scotland he grew up in and why there has been a gradual decay of what it means to be British in Scotland. And Fergal Keane examines why the concepts of Englishness and Britishness are hard to disentangle, and asks if the rise of Scotland's nationalism might inspire a new distinctly English nationalism among those who once saw themselves as British.

  • S2011E127 05/07/2011

    • May 7, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight on Newsnight, Richard Watson has new information on the latest hacking allegations being laid at the News of the World's door. We will be discussing the story and its fallout with former tabloid editor Alastair Campbell and News of the World insider Paul McMullan. Then talking about the future of newspapers will be Huffington Post chief Arianna Huffington and the new editor of The Independent Chris Blackhurst. Justin Rowlatt reports on what the loss of 1,400 jobs at train maker Bombardier says about the British approach to manufacturing and procurement deals, and about the Coalition's growth strategy. And Paul Mason has a strong film about Pathfinder housing scheme in Stoke-on-Trent, part of John Prescott's grand regeneration plan, and the devastating consequences of cutting funding for it.

  • S2011E128 06/07/2011

    • July 6, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Are the News of the World phone hacking allegations the equivalent for journalists of the MPs expenses scandal and a watershed moment for the profession in this country? Prime Minister David Cameron has promised a public inquiry after a police investigation ends - but Labour says it must happen sooner. Michael Crick and Richard Watson will have the latest on the story and we will be joined by guests to discuss. We have a piece on how Britain is slipping behind other countries in the fight against child sex abuse. Plus Jeremy will be talking to Professor Martin Seligman, the American psychologist whose work inspired the prime minister's plan to measure the nation's happiness. Apparently, "happiness is out, flourishing is in" - but is this the sort of thing governments should be getting involved in?

  • S2011E129 07/07/2011

    • July 7, 2011
    • BBC Two

    This Sunday's issue of the News of the World will be the last edition of the paper, News International has said. Will the bombshell announced today by James Murdoch assuage public anger? Will it remove the threat that the phone hacking scandal might scupper News Corporation's bid to take full control of satellite broadcaster BSkyB? Will The Sun newspaper now become a seven-day-a-week operation? Has the whole affair inflicted permanent damage on Rupert Murdoch's media empire? On tonight's programme we will put those questions to key players, get reaction from Wapping, analyse the fast-paced events of the day and bring you the very latest news. And, as Nasa prepares for the last ever space shuttle mission, Susan Watts has travelled to California's Mojave desert to meet the entrepreneurs preparing to take up the challenge of human space flight, now that the space agency is stepping aside.

  • S2011E130 08/07/2011

    • July 8, 2011
    • BBC Two

    On Newsnight tonight we ask if this is a watershed moment for British journalism with guests including writer Will Self, Heat magazine's Boyd Hilton, MumsNet co-founder Justine Roberts, former BBC director general Greg Dyke and Harriet Harman MP.

  • S2011E131 11/07/2011

    • July 11, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Another day of fast moving developments on the News of the World hacking story as Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt says he is seeking fresh advice from regulators on News Corp's takeover bid for BSkyB. And the has BBC learned there is evidence the News of the World (NoW) was paying a Metropolitan Police Royal Protection Squad officer for the contact details of senior members of the royal family, their friends and their relations. We will have the latest tonight and reports from Michael Crick on the political ramifications, from David Grossman on whether this is the moment the political classes break away from the Murdoch empire and Richard Watson on the police's part in the affair. All that and a report from Fifa World Cup host country Qatar by BBC Sports editor David Bond. You can read more about that in David's blog.

  • S2011E132 12/07/2011

    • July 12, 2011
    • BBC Two

    More on the hacking story tonight, as senior Metropolitan police officers tell MPs News International deliberately tried to thwart the original investigation into phone hacking. Also Paul Mason reports on a day of volatile European shares as investors worry that the eurozone debt crisis could spread to Italy and Spain. Plus we look at the government's energy policy as Energy Secretary Chris Huhne publishes a White Paper with plans for £110bn of investment in electricity generation under which a quarter of the country's power stations would be replaced by 2030. And Liz MacKean looks at what lies behind the upsurge in violence in Northern Ireland.

  • S2011E133 13/07/2011

    • July 13, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Jeremy Paxman will be joined tonight by a live studio audience, all of whom describe themselves as 'undecided voters'. He'll be asking them their views on the business of phone-hacking and how they think the party leaders have been dealing with recent revelations.

  • S2011E134 14/07/2011

    • July 14, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight on Newsnight with Kirsty Wark we have an exclusive interview with His Royal Highness Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Bin Abdulaziz Alsaud - the second biggest investor in News Corporation. David Grossman will be taking us through the events of the day. Tim Whewell has a report on how the contagion of the Murdoch brand is spreading around the world, and particularly to the US. And we will be discussing whether this phone-hacking scandal will accelerate the demise of newspapers, or blow over.

  • S2011E135 18/07/2011

    • July 18, 2011
    • BBC Two

    The fallout from the phone hacking scandal continues and tonight we'll have the very latest on the events of the day. Met Police Assistant Commissioner John Yates has quit amid growing pressure - we'll examine why he had to go and ask if public and political confidence in the police is now at an all-time low. David Cameron is cutting short his trip to Africa to return to the UK and he's announced that the Commons will be recalled on Wednesday to debate the latest developments. How damaged is the PM? And is there now a scenario that could lead to Cameron losing his job? All that and a look ahead to tomorrow's crucial culture select committee hearing with Rebekah Brooks, and James and Rupert Murdoch.

  • S2011E136 19/07/2011

    • July 19, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Rupert Murdoch has said he was "appalled and ashamed" to learn that the phone of Milly Dowler had been hacked by the News of the World while being questioned by MPs alongside his son James this afternoon. We've also heard Sir Paul Stephenson - the outgoing commissioner of the Met police - give his evidence to the home affairs committee today, and will watching when former NI exec Rebekah Brooks appears shortly. On tonight's programme we'll be analysing what we learned from today's hearings and will be considering what future the News International empire has.

  • S2011E137 20/07/2011

    • July 20, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Prime Minister David Cameron has said that "with hindsight" he would not have hired ex-News of the World editor Andy Coulson as his communications director. Our Political editor Michael Crick has been blogging about the links between Coulson and the top Tory triumvirate of Cameron, Osborne and Hague, and you can hear more from Michael and David Grossman on the political events of the day later tonight. Then we'll be asking Max Mosley, who won a privacy case against the News of the World after it exposed his sadomasochistic sex life, and celebrity publicist Max Clifford if this is the moment the British press changes. And Rory Cellan-Jones will be considering if there is a case for high speed rail.

  • S2011E138 21/07/2011

    • July 21, 2011
    • BBC Two

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy have hammered out a common position on the euro debt crisis ahead of a crunch meeting of eurozone leaders today. Details of the deal have not yet been released, but there are indications that a new tax on Europe's banks to help fund any new aid packages may NOT be part of the deal. Mark Urban is in Brussels for Newsnight - don't miss his report on the Euro Summit in tonight's programme.

  • S2011E139 22/07/2011

    • July 22, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Coming up at 2230 on BBC Two, new allegations about phone hacking at a weekend tabloid - which suggests illegal practices weren't just rife at the News of the World. We'll have the latest from the Norwegian capital where at least two people have been killed by a huge bomb blast, while reports say a gunman has opened fire at a Labour Party youth camp in Norway. Mark Urban has been to meet US General David Petraeus who acted as the US commander in both Afghanistan and Iraq and who is expected to take over as the Director of the Central Intelligence Agency in September. In a wide-ranging interview he talks about the drawdown in Afghanistan and the significance of the death of Obama Bin Laden. And Stephen Smith has been lunching with art historian Dr James Fox and muse Sue Tilley at Lucian Freud's favourite restaurant in Kensington. Stephen asks if Freud, who died at his London home on Wednesday, was the last great British painter.

  • S2011E140 25/07/2011

    • July 25, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Norwegian police are investigating claims by Anders Behring Breivik, who has admitted carrying out Friday's twin attacks in Norway, that he has "two more cells" working with him. Steve Rosenberg is in Oslo for us, and we'll be exploring how deeply ingrained the anti-immigrant strain of thinking is in Europe. Then Catrin Nye examines the links between Breivik and the English Defence League (EDL). Jeremy Paxman will be joined live by the EDL's leader Tommy Robinson. And Paul Mason travels to the north east of England to hear a "mea culpa" from former business secretary Lord Mandelson, who admits New Labour didn't get everything right on the economy when they were in office. Lord Mandelson will join Jeremy live in the studio to explain how he thinks Labour needs to change in order to win back power.

  • S2011E141 26/07/2011

    • July 26, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Growth in the UK economy slowed in the three months to 30 June, partly because of the extra bank holiday in April, and also due to some other one-off factors - including the Japanese tsunami. Chancellor George Osborne said the growth was good news, but Ed Balls accused him of choking the recovery. Tonight Paul Mason will give us his analysis, and David Grossman will explain the politics. Then, with a year to go until the 2012 Olympics, Peter Marshall visits the Olympic Park site in east London to find out if pledges that were made to win London the event - including leaving behind a lasting physical legacy and inspiring two million people to take up sport and physical activity - will be fulfilled. Then author Iain Sinclair, who is sceptical about the London project, explains his feelings about London 2012. And we'll be joined by the athlete turned ambassador who led London's bid, Lord Coe, and by the Welsh athlete and TV presenter Baroness Grey-Thompson.

  • S2011E142 27/07/2011

    • July 27, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight, we take another look at the situation in Libya. While Libyan rebels remain locked in battle with pro-Gaddafi forces, the UK steps up the pressure on Col Gaddafi by insisting all Libyan diplomats leave the UK. Former Labour cabinet minister James Purnell tells Newsnight that one of the reasons the Labour Party lost the last election was that their supporters no longer backed the welfare state. He's live in the studio later to discuss how the welfare system could be transformed. And could we be seeing the end of scientific testing on monkeys? [Spoiler Alert: No] We'll be discussing the issues.

  • S2011E143 28/07/2011

    • July 28, 2011
    • BBC Two

    On tonight's programme, Paul Mason retraces the epic journey from the Oklahoma Dust Bowl to the Californian promised land taken by migrant workers the Joad family, which John Steinbeck described in his 1939 Great Depression novel The Grapes of Wrath. Paul's been finding out how it reflects the realities of America's current debt crisis. Read more here. General David Petraeus has been speaking to Newsnight about his time as Nato's commander in Afghanistan. The new Director of the CIA also talks to us about difficult recent relations between the US and Pakistan -- he tells Mark Urban both sides have "stepped back from the abyss after looking into it". Read more on Mark's blog. And Stephen Smith examines the research which claims that if you stay up to watch Newsnight after your partner has gone to bed, it's a sure sign your marriage is in trouble

  • S2011E144 29/07/2011

    • July 29, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Two newspapers have been fined a total of £68,000 for breaking the law when reporting the investigation into landscape architect Jo Yeates' killing, and eight have paid out for libel. Meanwhile, lawyers for the private investigator Glenn Mulcaire have issued a statement saying he "acted on the instructions of others". So why does anyone bother with newspapers anymore? On tonight's Newsnight, our Political editor Michael Crick reports on the state of the British tabloid press. And as US Republican leaders scramble to rescue their deficit-cutting bill hours after a vote on it stalled because of a revolt from members of their own party, we'll be joined by Sharron Angle, the Republican Senate Candidate for Nevada in 2010, and leading Tea Party figure.

  • S2011E145 02/08/2011

    • August 2, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Syrian forces are pushing towards the centre of the town of Hama as they continue an offensive in which scores of people have died. Tim Whewell will bring us the latest tonight. Then we'll be asking how damaged President Barack Obama has been by the US debt crisis. Anna Adams has been investigating why many young women's cervical cancer tests are going unprocessed in England. And Lyse Doucet meets America's top military official, Admiral Mike Mullen, on his way home from what's expected to be his final visit to troops in Afghanistan and Iraq.

  • S2011E146 03/08/2011

    • August 3, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight, we will be leading on our exclusive report on fresh allegations of phone-hacking at Mirror Group Newspapers. Heather Mills has told the programme that in 2001 a senior Mirror Newspaper Group journalist admitted hacking voicemails left for her by Sir Paul McCartney. Newsnight has also learned that many other prominent people, including footballer Rio Ferdinand and TV presenter Ulrika Jonsson, also believe they were hacked by the Mirror group. You can read more about that story and listen to a clip of the Mills interview here. Mark Urban has a report on who is likely win control of the new Egypt in the parliamentary elections. Will it be the young liberals who led the campaign anti-Mubarak campaign in Tahrir Square, or Islamic groups and that relic of the old regime, the army? Andrew Verity has a report on how annual take home pay is dwindling in real terms. And Stephen Smith has been delving into the power of memory, with a bit of help from celebrated mnemonist Dominic O'Brien - who will be doing a memory challenge live on the programme.

  • S2011E147 04/08/2011

    • August 4, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Newsnight tonight investigates allegations that billions of dollars of long-term development aid money is being used as a tool of political repression in Ethiopia. Andrew Verity will be asking if the West is heading for a second economic slump. And as the government's new e-petitions website crashes with people trying to sign a range of petitions including one calling for the return of capital punishment, we'll be asking if it is really time to reinstate the death penalty in the UK. Join Kirsty for all that and more at 2230 on BBC Two.

  • S2011E148 05/08/2011

    • August 5, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Just five days ago, international investors were considering the possibility that the US government might default on its debt. That fear has now gone away, but it has been replaced by a fear that the world could be heading towards another credit crunch. Today instability on the stock markets continues, with sharp falls in the past 24 hours amid a crisis of confidence due to the eurozone debt crisis and concerns about weak recovery not only in the US but also in Europe.

  • S2011E149 08/08/2011

    • August 8, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Home Secretary Theresa May is meeting police chiefs about rioting in London with new violence erupting in Hackney. Skirmishes broke out between police and groups of young people in the area around Mare Street. Tonight Liz Mackean will bring us the latest, and will be considering what the origins of this unrest are and where it can go from here. Gavin will be joined in the studio by former London Mayor Ken Livingstone, Conservative Shaun Bailey, and a community leader from Tottenham. Later we'll be joined by broadcaster and columnist Darcus Howe to discuss if comparisons between these inner city riots and events that took place in the 1980s are useful or misleading. Then Andrew Verity will be asking what options remain for the West to avoid a double dip recession, and we'll be joined by German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle.

  • S2011E150 09/08/2011

    • August 9, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Some 16,000 officers are policing London's streets after three days of violence, with rioters warned they will feel the "full force of the law". Tonight Liz Mackean we'll be asking who the kids are that are perpetrating the trouble, and try find out what their motives are. Then Iranian rapper Reveal co-founder of hip-hop group Poisonous Poets, Lyn Costello from Mothers Against Murder and Aggression, and media exec Kelvin Mackenzie, will join us to debate what we should do with the rioters. Iain Watson will be examining if a malaise in the police force and a lack of leadership have contributed to the unrest. And David Grossman will be considering if the Prime Minister - who returned to Britain this morning after cutting his summer break short - has completely misjudged the situation.

  • S2011E151 10/08/2011

    • August 10, 2011
    • BBC Two

    David Cameron said this morning that parts of Britain are not just broken but "sick". Tonight we will discuss whether he is right and if so what the medicine should be with Conservative co-chair Baroness Warsi and Hackney MP Diane Abbott. We will have the latest on the unrest in the West Midlands from Liz MacKean and what is happening in Manchester from Anna Adams. We will also be reporting on vigilante activity and will be examining what role gang culture has played in the disorder.

  • S2011E152 11/08/2011

    • August 11, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight we will report on the emergency parliamentary session, which was called in response to the riots. Will the debate and the measures outlined by the prime minister bring us any closer to proper diagnosis of what went wrong, and how to ensure we don't see a repeat? David Grossman reports. Also we examine the role of parents and whether lack of discipline and family breakdown have been a factor in the unrest. We will chew over the week's events with our political panel.

  • S2011E153 12/08/2011

    • August 12, 2011
    • BBC Two

    David Grossman will be bringing us the news of the day and will be looking back at what's been a tumultuous week of rioting in English cities. Gavin Esler will be considering how damaged the fabric of Britain has been by the unrest. Stephen Smith will be looking at the foreign reaction to and coverage of the riots. And Emily will be joined in debate by magazine publisher Tyler Brûlé, Hong Kong entrepreneur Sir David Tang, and historian David Starkey.

  • S2011E154 15/08/2011

    • August 15, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tackling the "broken society" is back on the agenda following last week's riots. David Grossman reports tonight as Cameron and Miliband draw battle lines, and we'll be joined by David Willetts and Hilary Benn. Paul Mason considers the degree to which gangs can be blamed for the unrest. Madeleine Morris visits Berlin to ask how heavy a price the Germans are prepared to pay to save the euro - we hear from their Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle and will be joined by economist Joseph Stiglitz. And was Peter Oborne right when he wrote that the moral decay of our society is as bad at the top as it is at the bottom? We'll debate.

  • S2011E155 16/08/2011

    • August 16, 2011
    • BBC Two

    MPs have today released a letter from a journalist jailed for phone hacking, former News of the World royal editor Clive Goodman, alleging senior figures at the newspaper knew what was going on and struck a deal to stop him implicating the paper at trial. David Grossman will have all of the latest news on that story and we will be speaking to former deputy prime minister and hacking victim John Prescott, and former newspaper editor Paul Connew. Amid news that two men charged with inciting disorder via social networking site Facebook have each been jailed for four years we ask whether the courts are being too draconian in sentencing people connected to last week's riots, or whether this kind of sentencing is right and in fact overdue. Plus, across the world, slums are home to a billion people. The rich elite want the shanty towns cleared, but residents are surprisingly determined not to leave. Paul Mason has been to Estero de San Miguel, a slum in the Philippines capital Manila, to find out why.

  • S2011E156 17/08/2011

    • August 17, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight we lead on the surprise rise in UK unemployment, which rose in the three months to June, by 38,000 to 2.49 million, official figures show. We will be asking what is going wrong, the threat this poses and looking at measures aimed at reversing the situation, particularly enterprise zones. As we continue to analyse the fallout from last week's riots we have a report on recent unrest in Gloucester and will be taking another look at sentencing of those involved. Plus, why do some people seem to lead charmed lives? LSE academic Dr Catherine Hakim has written a book on the power of erotic capital which she says is at the heart of how we work, interact, make money and conduct our relationships. We will be speaking to the author and debating the issues she raises.

  • S2011E157 18/08/2011

    • August 18, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Stock markets have seen falls of about 5%, and some bank shares have plunged 10%, as the negative mood which has caused recent turmoil takes hold again. Paul Mason will have the latest news and analysis on that and we will be speaking to Jeffrey Sachs, who says we have been tripped up by globalisation. Caroline Hawley will report on the call from the leaders of the US, UK, France, Germany and EU for Syria's President Assad to step down over his suppression of protesters, and whether he is likely to heed them. Plus, many students hoping to go to university face an even more intense battle for places than usual as this is the last intake of students to English universities before the introduction of tuition fees of up to £9,000 a year in 2012. David Grossman reports on whether the government's changes - not just higher fees, but significant changes to the structure of the higher education in this country - really benefit young people and whether they will provide the skills the country needs? We have been to the Mossbourne Academy - a very successful school on the edge of the Mossbourne estate in Hackney, which was the backdrop to some of last weeks riots - and the school's head teacher, Sir Michael Wilshaw, will be joining the debate in our studio. And on the 20th anniversary of the 1991 Russian coup we have a Bridget Kendal film in which she talks to many of the key players including Mikhail Gorbachev.

  • S2011E158 19/08/2011

    • August 19, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight we will be looking at the attack on the British Council office in the Afghan capital, Kabul, in which armed insurgents seized control of the compound for a number of hours, killing at least 12 people. Paul Mason will have more on the ongoing turmoil in the stock markets as concerns over the strength of the global economy and eurozone debt continue. And we will be speaking to author of The Black Swan Nassim Nicholas Taleb. Plus, is Sally Bercow's appearance on Celebrity Big Brother a bad thing, or should what she does not have any bearing on her husband John Bercow's role as Speaker? We will be joined by ex-I'm a Celebrity Get Me Out of Here contestant Christine Hamilton and her husband Neil and Jacob Rees-Mogg to discuss.

  • S2011E159 22/08/2011

    • August 22, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Robin Denselow will have the latest on the battle for control of Tripoli, where troops loyal to Col Muammar Gaddafi are battling rebels. Gabriel Gatehouse will be analysing who the rebels' interim administration, the National Transitional Council (NTC), are and what their agenda is. We'll ask guests - including Lord Malloch-Brown and John Bolton - if the Libya conflict signals a rebirth of liberal interventionism. And Sarfraz Manzoor considers if English cricket is doing enough to integrate Asian players. Join Jeremy at 2230 on BBC Two for that, and more.

  • S2011E160 23/08/2011

    • August 23, 2011
    • BBC Two

    The battle for Tripoli seems to be in its final stages tonight, with rebels taking over Colonel Muammar Gaddafi's fortified compound in the city, one of the final areas under the Libyan leader's control. Tonight we are dedicating the whole programme to the day's events and asking what next for Libya? We will be hearing from key players and our reporters on the ground as we examine the prospects for the last pockets of pro-Gaddafi resistance being swiftly eradicated, for a peaceful transition of power once the fighting stops and what is likely to happen to Colonel Gaddafi - whose whereabouts is currently unknown. We will look back over more than 40 years of Gaddafi rule, asking if this should be a day for celebration or not, and forward to what kind of Libya we are likely to see without Gaddafi at the helm.

  • S2011E161 24/08/2011

    • August 24, 2011
    • BBC Two

    The situation in Libya remains chaotic with Tripoli seeing running battles between rebel fighters and Gaddafi loyalists, new Nato air strikes, and a defiant message from Colonel Gaddafi himself, whose whereabouts remain unknown. Tonight we will be making sense of what is happening and asking where Libya goes from here with reporters on the ground and experts in the studio. We will be asking how the National Transitional Council can properly establish itself as Libya's leadership with ousted leader Colonel Muammar Gaddafi still at large. And what Nato's responsibilities towards Libya's recovery are. And we will take a wider look at whether the Arab Spring is likely to be good or bad news for women. Plus, Citizen Smith has been on National Citizen Service - David Cameron's training programme for 16-year-olds which is to be expanded in response to the recent riots. How effective will a universal programme be at combating the sort of problems we saw a few weeks ago? And how is it different from existing youth programmes, many of which have been facing cuts? Stephen Smith has been finding out.

  • S2011E162 25/08/2011

    • August 25, 2011
    • BBC Two

    "I was buzzing me, just smashing windows and police cars and stuff... a big massive buzz." Tonight we have a film from Donal MacIntyre who has been meeting some of the young men who took part in the recent Manchester riots. He finds them revelling in the memories of the time when they overturned the rule of law and made the streets their own. To discuss the film Kirsty be joined by a shopkeeper who was trapped in his store during the riots and had to be rescued by police, someone who knows the looters, and a politician. Meanwhile... another confusing day in Libya. The hunt for Col Gaddafi continues, although reports he was trapped in a building in Tripoli came to nothing. It is certainly clear that the Transitional Council are desperate for money. Tim Whewell is in Benghazi for us tonight and Kirsty will be speaking to the Foreign Secretary William Hague. And Madeleine Morris has been looking into new figures which suggest that net migration rose by 21% last year, with 239,000 more people arriving in the UK than those leaving.

  • S2011E163 26/08/2011

    • August 26, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight we will have the latest on Libya from our correspondent Tim Whewell, who is currently in Benghazi, which for now remains home to the National Transitional Council's headquarters. And we will be speaking to the NTC's deputy leader Abdul Hafiz Ghoga live on the programme. Plus former Daily Telegraph editor Charles Moore has done an authored film for us in which he explains where he thinks the Conservatives are going wrong. Afterwards Danny Finkelstein and Noreena Hertz will discuss his conclusions. All of that, and our Economics editor Paul Mason in the presenter's chair for the first time - 10.30pm on BBC Two.

  • S2011E164 30/08/2011

    • August 30, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Seven people have been shot dead by security forces during anti-government protests in Syria at the start of the festival of Eid al-Fitr, activists say. Our diplomatic editor Mark Urban will have the latest later. Tim Whewell is in Libya and has a film for us about nation building, which sees him haggling over the price of AK47s at a Benghazi gun market. Anna Adams examines the row over independent abortion counselling and who should do it. And Neil Bowdler considers if resomation, a body 'liquefaction' process, and promession, a method of freeze-drying corpses, could offer greener alternatives to burial and cremation. Read more about that here.

  • S2011E165 31/08/2011

    • August 31, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Paul Mason will report on the shake-up of British banks, which government sources have indicated may not come into force for several years. David Grossman explains why the fifty per cent rate of income tax required of people earning more than £150,000 a year has illuminated the divisions within the coalition. We'll return to a story from last night's programme - about changes to abortion counselling services rules so that clinics which offer termination services do not also provide advice. Tonight Downing Street said "the discussions currently underway do not represent any moral shift in the government's approach to abortion as an issue". We'll debate the government's moral agenda and its commitment to social liberty. And Tom Heap visits Croatia, home to the richest cave fauna in Europe, which is under threat by pollution and development.

  • S2011E166 01/09/2011

    • September 1, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Senior diplomats are meeting in Paris for a major international conference on Libya's future. What should that future look like, and will the National Transitional Council and international community's vision dovetail or not? Tonight Peter Marshall will bring us the latest from the Paris conference and Tim Whewell will report from Libya. We have a report from David Shukman on illnesses linked to the dust from the attacks on New York's World Trade Center on 11 September 2001, affecting thousands. Plus we look at government proposals to overhaul planning laws in order to jump-start the building industry and the economy, a major shake-up which green campaigners say will lead to a development free for all and a legacy of blighted landscapes and urban sprawl.

  • S2011E167 02/09/2011

    • September 2, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight we look into the rendition claims made by a Libyan rebel military commander, which if true would suggest a closer than expected relationship between the US and ousted Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi's regime. Abdel Hakim Belhaj claims he was tortured by CIA agents who suspected him of being an al-Qaeda terrorist and then handed by the Americans to Gaddafi's intelligence services. Peter Marshall will be reporting on that and we will be talking to Menzies Campbell and to Michael Sheuer, former head of the CIA's Bin Laden unit. We are looking at the draft emergency measures to relocate terror suspects under Tpims, terrorism prevention and investigation measures. The relocation powers had been ditched by the coalition, but under draft emergency legislation they could be brought back in exceptional circumstances. We will be talking to Hazel Blears and Tom Brake, co-chairman of the Liberal Democrat backbench committee on home affairs. And whatever happened to silly season that period of summer typified by the emergence of frivolous news stories in the media? Stephen Smith reports.

  • S2011E168 05/09/2011

    • September 5, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight on Newsnight Richard Watson examines if Britain was turning a blind eye to maltreatment and colluding with the Gaddafi regime to arrange the rendition of Libyan terror suspects - the PM has said that allegations that MI6 was involved should be examined by an independent inquiry. Paul Mason will be asking if the IMF's managing-director, Christine Lagarde, was right when she said the global economic outlook had darkened suddenly over the summer, and Jeremy will be speaking to the former chancellor Alistair Darling. Then we'll be hearing from Murdo Fraser, the favourite to become the next leader of the Scottish Conservatives who reckons the only hope for the party to attract greater support in Scotland would be to split off from the UK party. And Tim Whewell has been meeting the high command of Libya's National Transitional Council.

  • S2011E169 06/09/2011

    • September 6, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Ken Clarke has blamed a "broken penal system" for the riots that erupted across England last month. Writing in the Guardian, he said the "hardcore" of those involved were known criminals whose behaviour had not been changed by previous punishments. Tonight Liz MacKean reports on whether the justice secretary's assessment is correct and what can be done. Also, former News of the World legal manager Tom Crone has told members of a House of Commons committee investigating the News of the World phone-hacking scandal that he was "certain" he told James Murdoch about an e-mail which indicated hacking at the paper went beyond one rogue reporter. In a previous Culture, Media and Sport Committee hearing, News Corp bosses Rupert and James Murdoch said they were not told of an email. And today James Murdoch has said that he stands by what he said. David Grossman will be assessing the discrepancies and whether they are likely to dim News Corporation shareholders' view of James Murdoch and his chances of one day becoming head of News Corporation. And Stephen Smith is looking at some of Britain's worst performing high streets, and with the help of retail adviser Mary Portas, assessing whether they can be saved and if we should even try.

  • S2011E170 07/09/2011

    • September 7, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight we report on the growing global currency war, which escalated dramatically yesterday after Switzerland stepped in to weaken the franc in a bid to rid itself of "safe haven" status - how much of a threat is it and who has the political power to avert a crisis? Nadine Dorries talks about her failed bid to change the law on abortion counselling to stop abortion providers giving NHS-funded counselling to women. We speak to a young man who has been in the Syrian city of Homs, scene of some of the worst clashes between anti-government protesters and government forces, and who was shot during the unrest. Plus, how is popular culture being used to alter perceptions of Muslims? We have an interview with Dr Naif al-Mutawa, creator of The 99 - comic book superheroes based on Islamic culture and society. And Catrin Nye speaks to the creators of Canadian TV sitcom Little Mosque on the Prairie - described as The Cosby Show for Muslims. You can read her article about that here, and watch the full report at 10.30pm.

  • S2011E171 08/09/2011

    • September 8, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Is the tail wagging the dog? Tonight we assess the claim that the Liberal Democrats are exercising too much control over the government on a whole range of issues. We talk to former US Secretary of State Colin Powell in the Bush administration about 9/11 and its impact. We have a film from Security correspondent Gordon Corera on the way NYPD and the FBI has responded to terror threats in the years after the attacks on New York and Washington and accusations that they have engaged in entrapment tactics. And we have an interview with Cathy Wilson about her time as the wife of the serial killer Peter Tobin.

  • S2011E172 09/09/2011

    • September 9, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight Kirsty Wark presents an hour-long special on the 10 years since the 9/11 terror attacks live from New York. We will be hearing from key US members of the Bush administration - former defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld and former Homeland Security chief Michael Chertoff. Mark Urban has a film on the US response to the attacks and whether it was driven at times by a desire for revenge. And we discuss the events of 10 years ago and the effect on the decade which followed with guests including Carl Bernstein, Suzanne Vega, Christiane Amanpour and Fran Lebowitz.

  • S2011E173 13/09/2011

    • September 13, 2011
    • BBC Two

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel has sought to calm nerves over a possible Greek default, warning of a domino effect if Greece fails and exits the single currency. Tonight Paul Mason reports on whether Mrs Merkel's attempts to allay fears will work and what is likely to happen next in the eurozone. David Grossman reports from the Trades Unions Congress where Labour leader Ed Miliband has delivered a key note address in which he said despite public sector worker anger at cuts it was a "mistake" to strike while talks were going on, and was heckled in return. Mark Urban examines the Palestinian bid for statehood set to happen at the UN General Assembly, which gets under way today. And we speak to Richard Dawkins, evolutionary biologist and outspoken atheist, about the thinking behind his new book The Magic of Reality and his belief in the need to indoctrinate children with science rather than mythology.

  • S2011E174 14/09/2011

    • September 14, 2011
    • BBC Two

    The leaders of Greece, France and Germany will have a phone conference this evening as they seek to find a way to contain the spiralling debt crisis in the eurozone. Tonight Paul Mason will explain what a Greek default might look like - could it be orderly and managed or are we looking at a Lehman type event? You can read more of Paul's thoughts on that in his blog. As we learn that unemployment in the UK rose by 80,000 in the three months to July and unions schedule a nationwide day of strikes and demonstrations for 30 November in protest at changes to public sector pensions, David Grossman looks at the coalition's growth strategy. Shadow Chancellor Ed Balls and someone from government will join us live. And Tim Whewell has been investigating the assassination of General Abdul Fatah Younis in Libya at the height of the campaign against Colonel Gaddafi in late July. With the murder still unsolved, there is mounting anger among members of Younes' large and powerful tribe.

  • S2011E175 15/09/2011

    • September 15, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Ministry of Justice (MoJ) figures show that a quarter of those charged over last month's riots had committed more than 10 past offences, while three-quarters had a previous caution or conviction. Tonight we have an interview with Ken Clarke about the link between re-offending and the unrest and what the justice minister thinks needs to be done. IMF chief Christine Lagarde has warned of a "dangerous" new economic phase in which bold, collective action is needed to prevent the major economies slipping back. Paul Mason will have full analysis of that and the latest on the crisis in the eurozone ahead of Friday's meeting of European finance ministers in Poland, which US Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner is also due to attend. And we have an authored film from one-time "Cameron Cutie" Charlotte Vere on whether the Tories are anti-women. Afterwards she and Angela Eagle will join Gavin in the studio to discuss.

  • S2011E176 16/09/2011

    • September 16, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Last night on Newsnight former chancellor Ken Clarke said that political leadership in Washington and Western Europe has suffered "paralysis" in the face of the financial crisis. Tonight Mark Urban will be taking a closer look at this claim, assessing what is causing the inertia and its consequences. The Guardian newspaper has said that the Metropolitan Police are seeking an order under the Official Secrets Act to force it to disclose the confidential sources of its reports on the News of the World phone hacking scandal - we will have the latest on that. And Susan Watts reports on an extraordinary trial in the earthquake-hit town of L'Aquila in Italy in which science itself seemed to be on trial as seismologists are charged with manslaughter for failing to predict the 2009 quake in which more than 300 people died.

  • S2011E177 19/09/2011

    • September 19, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight's Newsnight comes live from Birmingham where the Liberal Democrats' 2011 conference is in full swing. Iain Watson will be reporting from the marginal seat of Birmingham Yardley where he's asking if the Lib Dems are facing electoral meltdown, David Grossman will be auditing exactly what the party has achieved in government so far, and Jeremy will be speaking to the Business Secretary Vince Cable.

  • S2011E178 20/09/2011

    • September 20, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Paul Mason is in Athens today. Tonight he will bring us the latest on the crisis in the eurozone and Greek attempts to avoid a debt default. We will also be asking whether a default is inevitable and if so why leaders aren't setting out a plan for handling it, rather than continuing down the current path. The Liberal Democrat conference is continuing today and we will have an interview with Energy Secretary Chris Huhne. Plus Iain Watson will be looking at what the Lib Dems think now about the role Britain should play in Europe, and in dealing with the eurozone economic crisis. David Grossman will report on the tribes that make up the Liberal Democrat membership and look ahead to leader Nick Clegg's speech tomorrow. And documentarian Michael Cockerell, whose latest series The Secret World of Whitehall broadcast this month, will report for us on the allegations that an aide Education Secretary Michael Gove used a personal email account to circumvent freedom of information laws.

  • S2011E179 21/09/2011

    • September 21, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight Iain Watson is doing our lead story on growth and will be asking if the government is wobbling on Plan A, and if the governor of the Bank of England and other central bankers might ride to the rescue. Then we have an update on an investigation from last month which uncovered evidence that the Ethiopian government is using billions of dollars of development aid as a tool for political oppression. You can read more about our initial investigation here. Now Newsnight has heard from members of the Ethiopian diaspora that there's been a concerted government backlash. We'll be hearing from the International Development Secretary Andrew Mitchell. Prime Minister David Cameron has written to the National Trust to try to reassure its members who are campaigning against proposed changes to planning laws - the biggest reforms of the rules since the 1930s. Tim Whewell reports from rural Northamptonshire for us tonight, where a German-owned electricity firm has proposed building seven 410-foot (125m) wind turbines. And we'll be joined by leading businessman and peer Lord Wolfson.

  • S2011E180 22/09/2011

    • September 22, 2011
    • BBC Two

    There's quite a lot of sport planned for this evening's Newsnight, including from the BBC's Sports Editor David Bond who'll be telling us five ways competitors could cheat at the 2012 Olympics. Then we'll be joined live by Olympic champion and anti-corruption campaigner Michael Johnson. Gavin will be meeting the Russian oligarch who bank rolls the Independent and Evening Standard newspapers, Alexander Lebedev. And our Diplomatic editor Mark Urban will be watching David Cameron's intervention speech at the UN later.

  • S2011E181 23/09/2011

    • September 23, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Our Economics editor Paul Mason has just arrived back from Greece, and tonight he will have the latest on the economic crisis both there and further afield. Plus we will be asking why, unlike in 2009, there is no sign of global leaders coming together to deal with the problem and opting instead for "kicking the can down the road". Mark Urban will be picking over Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas' decision to present the Palestinians' bid for statehood at the UN later today, despite a US promise to veto the move in the Security Council. And Susan Watts will have more on the experiment results which are baffling scientists at Cern, home of the Large Hadron Collider, that appear to show subatomic particles known as neutrinos have exceeded the speed of light.

  • S2011E182 26/09/2011

    • September 26, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight Paul Mason will have the latest on the eurozone rescue plan, which is reported to be taking shape in Washington, analysis of what it means, the timetable and the likelihood that it will work. And we will be joined by a fantastic cast of financial experts giving us their analysis. At the Labour party conference in Liverpool Iain Watson will focus on how the party can become economically credible again. We aren't speaking to Ed Balls as said earlier, but we will be talking to shadow foreign secretary Douglas Alexander. Plus David Grossman will be asking what the Labour party is for these days, and Jeremy Paxman will be taking up that theme with Lord Prescott.

  • S2011E183 27/09/2011

    • September 27, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Kirsty will be joined by a live studio audience at the Labour Conference in Liverpool tonight, where their leader Ed Miliband delivered a speech earlier in which he slammed big bankers, consensus politics, energy companies and benefit cheats. He said for decades our economy and society had been based on the wrong values. David Grossman will give us his analysis of Ed Miliband's performance later. And in light of John Prescott's comments on last night's programme that Ed Miliband should get rid of anyone who is "not pulling their weight", we'll consider if its time for a shadow cabinet reshuffle, and who might go.

  • S2011E184 28/09/2011

    • September 28, 2011
    • BBC Two

    On tonight's Newsnight Paul Mason will be asking whether Europe and the world banking system is on the edge of catastrophe. He'll look at fears that the so-called rescue plan for the eurozone is already in trouble and will consider what would happen if the euro ultimately broke up. We'll be joined by the European Commission, Johanna Kyrklund from Shroders, economist and former DG of the CBI Sir Richard Lambert, and Peter Oborne from the Daily Telegraph to debate if the euro project is worth saving. We have a film about social breakdown amid austerity in Greece, and we'll hear from our correspondent Peter Marshall in Berlin - where Chancellor Angela Merkel faces a vote tomorrow that threatens to weaken her politically and undermine her ability to manage the debt crisis. Plus we'll have an interview with Labour leader Ed Miliband.

  • S2011E185 29/09/2011

    • September 29, 2011
    • BBC Two

    A large majority in Germany's parliament has approved new powers for the EU's main bailout fund, despite opposition from some members of the ruling coalition. Peter Marshall is in Berlin getting under the skin of what the Germans really think about Europe and the euro, and we will be discussing the latest events in the studio. We look at the wider implications of footballer Rio Ferdinand losing a High Court privacy action over a "kiss and tell" newspaper story. We have a live interview with actor Mark Rylance about the stunning success of the play Jerusalem as it returns to London from an award-winning run on Broadway - and what it tells us about being English. Plus, as Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah overturns a court ruling sentencing a woman to 10 lashes for breaking a ban on female drivers we ask whether he can win the battle against the hardliners in his kingdom.

  • S2011E186 30/09/2011

    • September 30, 2011
    • BBC Two

    In our final edition of the week, Andrew Verity will be asking what if anything is wrong with the predatory capitalism that Ed Miliband called for a clampdown on at the Labour Party's conference earlier this week. Tim Whewell will have more on the news that US-born suspected al-Qaeda leader Anwar al-Awlaki, whose death was said to have been personally ordered by US President Barack Obama, has been killed in Yemen. And as Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito's appeal against their convictions for the 2007 murder of Perugia student Meredith Kercher draws to a close we ask what the obsession with Knox is and has it got anything to do with Berlusconi's Italy.

  • S2011E187 03/10/2011

    • October 3, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Tonight's programme will come from the Tory party conference in Manchester, where Jeremy Paxman will be joined by an audience of conference attendees. Jeremy will be speaking to MPs Philip Hammond, David Davis and Don Foster. Also we'll be getting the journalist's view of the conference from Fraser Nelson and Kevin Maguire. The main topic for discussion will be the economy and Chancellor George Osborne's big speech today and David Grossman will be giving his analysis of what the chancellor said. Plus Iain Watson will be looking at the European economic crisis amid the news that Greece is likely to miss targets to cut its budget deficit. And as the government announces that it is going to invest £50m to commercialise graphene - a carbon allotrope invented at Manchester University - we ask what is it and why is it important?

  • S2011E188 04/10/2011

    • October 4, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Jeremy is in Manchester tonight with all the action and analysis from the third day of the Conservative Party conference. There has been a bit of a catflap over human rights, is it the Tories' claws four moment? (Sorry....) We'll have the annual conference season interview with the Mayor of London (you can re-watch the interviews from 2009, and 2010 here). This year Jeremy asks Boris if he'd consider standing for Parliament while serving as Mayor, and is offered a hand from Boris should he ever decide to give up his day job presenting Newsnight and run for leader of the Conservative party. And Jeremy will be joined by an audience of 70 Conservative women to discuss the reasons for the government's worsening polling with woman, and to work out what more the Conservatives could do to appeal to women.

  • S2011E189 05/10/2011

    • October 5, 2011
    • BBC Two

    David Cameron re-wrote his conference speech at the last minute to omit a call on households to pay off their credit cards. Tonight Newsnight picks through the detail of what stayed in and asks whether his appeal for a can-do optimism at an anxious time for the economy is likely to be heeded. Paul Mason reports on talk of a concerted move to beef up balance sheets of struggling European banks, what is needed and what is likely to happen. We have a strong Lyse Doucet film from inside Syria about the current nature of the anti-government protests. Plus Jeremy talks to musician Brian Eno about art and music in an age of turbulence./

  • S2011E190 06/10/2011

    • October 6, 2011
    • BBC Two

    The Bank of England has said it will inject a further £75bn into the economy through quantitative easing (QE), the first time it has added to its QE programme since 2009. Tonight Paul Mason will take us through the details of what is happening, why it is happening now and how the Bank hope it to aid the fragile economic recovery. With the BBC announcing that it is planning to cut 2,000 jobs and radically change programming in order to cut 20% from its budget over the next five years, Stephen Smith will report on the wider cultural impact of a shrinking Auntie. We look at the impact of the work done by Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, who has died at the age of 56 from pancreatic cancer. And we have a report from Mark Easton on mixed race Britain including some exclusive new stats which show that the numbers of people in Britain who are mixed-race is actually much higher than previously thought.

  • S2011E191 07/10/2011

    • October 7, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Moody's has downgraded the credit rating of 12 UK financial firms including Lloyds TSB, RBS, Nationwide and Santander UK amid concerns that the government is now less likely to support some firms if they get into trouble. Moody's also downgraded nine Portuguese banks, blaming financial weakness. Tonight Andrew Verity reports on the significance of this news and whether the belief that the days of UK government bank bail outs are over is correct. We will also be getting further analysis by studio by guests. And Stephen Smith has a fresh Citizen Smith report. He's had an exclusive look the first wave of community organisers who are meant to build David Cameron's big society and we talk to Civil Society Minister Nick Hurd.

  • S2011E192 10/10/2011

    • October 10, 2011
    • BBC Two

    Defence Secretary Liam Fox has told MPs that he met his friend Adam Werritty 22 times at the Ministry of Defence and 18 times on foreign trips. Mr Fox also said that Mr Werritty, who has no government role or national security clearance, had not been involved in defence procurement issues. Tonight, we'll examine whether the Defence Secretary is guilty of impropriety or simply made some minor errors of judgement. Following the violence which killed twenty-four people at a rally of Coptic Christians in Cairo at the weekend, Tim Whewell will ask if attacks against Christians in Egypt are becoming worse in post-revolutionary Egypt, and if so why. You can watch one of Tim's previous reports on this from Cairo here. And Rory Cellan Jones has a fascinating film about whether the education system in England and Wales is failing to produce enough polymaths and top flight computer programmers who could one day emulate the likes of Steve Jobs and Mark Zuckerberg. Watch a preview clip here. We'll also be joined by the Minister for Culture, Communications and Creative Industries, Ed Vaizey.

  • S2011E193 11/10/2011

    • October 11, 2011
    • BBC Two

    David Cameron says he wants his to be "the greenest government ever", but last week Chancellor George Osborne sparked anger among environmentalists when he told the Conservative Party conference the UK would cut emissions no faster than others in Europe, and environmental measures would not be taken at the expense of British business. And MPs on the Environmental Audit Committee have warned today that the government's "schizophrenic attitude" to climate change is undermining investor confidence in low-carbon industries. Tonight Susan Watts examines whether the green agenda is being watered down and we will debate the issues in the studio. US "supercop" Bill Bratton, who has gained a reputation for introducing bold measures to reduce crime in New York, Boston and Los Angeles, is in London to take part in a government conference on how to tackle riots and disorder and has given us an interview. We report on the jailing of former Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko for seven years, whom a judge ruled had criminally exceeded her powers when she signed a gas deal with Russia in 2009. Mrs Tymoshenko said the charges were politically motivated. And the EU said it was disappointed with the verdict, and that Kiev's handling of the case risked deep implications for its hopes of EU integration. Plus, Stephen Smith has been to talk to former Oasis guitarist Noel Gallagher about the Manchester riots, the coalition and the passing of Cool Britannia.

  • S2011E194 12/10/2011

    • October 12, 2010
    • BBC Two

    UK unemployment has risen to a 17-year high of 2.57 million, according to official figures. Tonight Joe Lynam will give us his take on those figures, the Eurozone crisis and Barroso's plan. Jeremy will be joined by former Belgian PM Guy Verhofstadt and editor-in-chief at The Economist, John Micklethwait. Jonny Dymond will be asking members of the Mormon Church how they think they are viewed by the rest of the United States, and asseses the likelihood that one of their faithful could be elected the next president. And ahead of the start of Lord Justice Leveson's inquiry on phone hacking, Steve Coogan will join us live in the studio. That and more at 2230 on BBC Two.

  • S2011E195 13/10/2011

    • October 13, 2010
    • BBC Two

    The independent watchdog for health and social care says a fifth of NHS hospitals are breaking the law, when it comes to properly feeding and treating elderly patients. The Care Quality Commission visited 100 hospitals, and found cause for concern at more than half of them. Tonight we examine what was said and how much of this a reflection of how the elderly are treated in Britain more generally. Peter Marshall has a report looking into who are the backers who raised funds to pay for Adam Werritty to act as Defence Secretary Liam Fox's adviser, and David Grossman will have the latest developments on the story. We have a live interview with former Barnsley MP Eric Illsley who was jailed for expenses fraud. Susan Watts reports on the new obesity strategy for England in which the government has tried to stress the importance of personal responsibility. And we have a report on how garments labelled "designed in Scotland" and sold by UK high street chain Edinburgh Woollen Mill are actually being made by North Korean labour in Mongolian factories.

  • S2011E196 14/10/2011

    • October 14, 2011
    • BBC Two

    The news that Liam Fox has resigned as defence secretary has changed our plans for the programme. We will no longer be running a piece on how proposed changes to planning regulations might affect urban areas and speaking to Lord Rogers about this issue. Instead the whole programme is devoted to Dr Fox's resignation, the events that led up to it, the questions that remain and where this leaves the government. We will have analysis from our Defence editor Mark Urban and reporters David Grossman and Richard Watson. And we will be joined on the programme by guests including shadow defence secretary Jim Murphy, former head of the British Army General Sir Mike Jackson, and journalists Fraser Nelson and Miranda Green.

Season 2013

  • S2013E235 23/10/2013

    • October 23, 2013
    • BBC Two

    In-depth investigation and analysis of the stories behind the day's headlines with Jeremy Paxman. What future for Grangemouth? Why won't the police apologise for plebgate? Russell Brand talks about his revolution, and how children have ditched the great outdoors.

Season 2014

  • S2014E01 06/01/2014

    • BBC Two

  • S2014E02 07/01/2014

    • BBC Two

  • S2014E03 08/01/2014

    • BBC Two

  • S2014E04 09/01/2014

    • BBC Two

  • S2014E05 10/01/2014

    • BBC Two

  • S2014E201 23/10/2014

    • October 23, 2014
    • BBC Two

    In-depth investigation and analysis of the stories behind the day's headlines with Evan Davis. A report from Ebola-stricken Liberia, analysis of the NHS Five-Year Plan, Russell Brand on his revolution, and migrant students denied loans.

  • S2014E225 26/11/2014

    • November 26, 2014
    • BBC Two

    General Richards on Britain's defence future, plans for new Scottish powers, domestic violence sentencing and an interview with Noam Chomsky. Presented by Evan Davis.

Season 2015

  • S2015E01 05/01/2015

    • January 5, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Evan Davis presents a Newsnight special looking ahead to the 2015 British general election. The team crunches the numbers and guesses what the rows will be about.

  • S2015E02 06/01/2015

    • January 6, 2015
    • BBC Two

    The German Chancellor comes to Britain. How did she become so powerful? The NHS in crisis. The economics of parcel delivery. Curing epilepsy. The selfy stick. With Evan Davis.

  • S2015E03 07/01/2015

    • January 7, 2015
    • BBC Two

    The latest on the French terror attack. With Emily Maitlis in Paris and Evan Davis in London.

  • S2015E04 08/01/2015

    • January 8, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E05 09/01/2015

    • January 9, 2015
    • BBC Two

    In-depth investigation and analysis of the stories behind the day's headlines with Kirsty Wark. Looks at the latest on the events in France. And how are British Muslims reacting?

  • S2015E06 12/01/2015

    • January 12, 2015
    • BBC Two

    With Evan Davis. How did the terrorists in Paris evade detection? The election and the economy, the mother whose child met his killer online and Fiona Shaw reads The Waste Land.

  • S2015E07 13/01/2015

    • January 13, 2015
    • BBC Two

    The divisions created in Paris. Inflation. Scientist Sir Paul Nurse on the failings of politicians. RJ Mitte from Breaking Bad. What do we think of Tony Blair?

  • S2015E08 14/01/2015

    • January 14, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E09 15/01/2015

    • January 15, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E10 16/01/2015

    • January 16, 2015
    • BBC Two

    With Emily Maitlis. Can the prime minister really ban encryption? Britain's Got Talent, Gaza style. And gay schools for gay children? Does it work?

  • S2015E11 19/01/2015

    • January 19, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E12 20/01/2015

    • January 20, 2015
    • BBC Two

    In-depth investigation and analysis of the stories behind the day's headlines with Emily Maitlis. Will the Greek election shatter the Euro? What if the UK Independence Party hold the balance of power at the election? Mansion tax. The director of Wolf Hall. The Debs of Bletchley Park.

  • S2015E13 21/01/2015

    • January 21, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Evan Davis in Davos and Kirsty Wark in London look at the Chilcot Inquiry, events in Davos, the premiere of the BBC's adaptation of Wolf Hall, and murder and intrigue in Argentina.

  • S2015E14 22/01/2015

    • January 22, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Evan Davis interviews chancellor of the exchequer George Osborne in Davos.

  • S2015E15 23/01/2015

    • January 23, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Newsnight is live in Athens as the Greeks prepare to vote. The Saudi king dies; we hear from his niece. And we game-play the fallout of the 2015 election.

  • S2015E16 26/01/2015

    • January 26, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Newsnight is live in Athens as the Greeks elect the far left to power. Are the bankers worried? Are the politicians? Is the left on its way back across Europe?

  • S2015E17 27/01/2015

    • January 27, 2015
    • BBC Two

    The shadow health secretary on his NHS plans. The witnesses to Dr Mengele. Greece. Ukraine. American Sniper - whatever happened to the anti-war film? With Kirsty Wark.

  • S2015E18 28/01/2015

    • January 28, 2015
    • BBC Two

    A released captive of Islamic State. Former Greek PM, gender selective abortion. Who gets a say in coalition negotiation? Stephen Pinker on punctuation.

  • S2015E19 29/01/2015

    • January 29, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E20 30/01/2015

    • January 30, 2015
    • BBC Two

    The stories behind the day's headlines with Emily Maitlis. The new Greek finance minister refusing debt talks. How can a child have three parents? And the debs of Bletchley Park.

  • S2015E21 02/02/2015

    • February 2, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Why are police storing millions of faces they have been told not to? Plus the app that wants to take over democracy, Vince Cable on tuition fees and the latest on Ukraine.

  • S2015E22 03/02/2015

    • February 3, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Why are 3,000 more people than usual dying in Britain each week? Plus Ed Balls on Labour and big business, Islamic State raise the stakes with the murder of their Jordanian pilot hostage, and should gay teachers come out?

  • S2015E23 04/02/2015

    • February 4, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Abuse in Rotherham. The outgoing UK ambassador to Saudi Arabia. Jogging with Jim Murphy. A special report on Winterbourne care home. And Ben Goldacre on how we can rewire democracy.

  • S2015E24 05/02/2015

    • February 5, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E25 06/02/2015

    • February 6, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Islamic State blame a hostage's death on air strikes. Who's winning the propaganda war? Labour's bad week. Google versus Brussels.

  • S2015E26 09/02/2015

    • February 9, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Are we too soft on tax evasion? Rowan Williams discusses protecting Christians in Iraq. Is appeasement our policy on Russia? Plus the internet election.

  • S2015E27 10/02/2015

    • February 10, 2015
    • BBC Two

    The PM wants more pay, but not for his employees. Do MPs work too much? Plus Ukraine talks, the children who die in mental hospitals and the newsreader with the phony war stories.

  • S2015E28 11/02/2015

    • February 11, 2015
    • BBC Two

    With Emily Maitlis. Harriet Harman on the HSBC tax scandal, exclusive revelations on killings in Ukraine, Labour's pink battle bus and Piers Morgan on Jon Stewart.

  • S2015E29 12/02/2015

    • February 12, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E30 13/02/2015

    • February 13, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Why did tax authorities ignore evidence of crimes? Eurozone. Ben Carson, the US presidential candidate. Whitworth Art Gallery. With Emily Maitlis.

  • S2015E31 16/02/2015

    • February 16, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E32 17/02/2015

    • February 17, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Analysis of the stories behind the day's headlines with Evan Davis, including Richard Dawkins, Greece and the fostering crisis. Plus is the Church of England being anti-Tory?

  • S2015E33 18/02/2015

    • February 18, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E34 19/02/2015

    • February 19, 2015
    • BBC Two

    The Greek crisis rumbles on. Russia's threat to the West. What do the SNP want? Educating Afghan girls. EastEnders at 30.

  • S2015E35 20/02/2015

    • February 20, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E36 23/02/2015

    • February 23, 2015
    • BBC Two

    The stories behind the day's headlines with Evan Davis. MPs cash for access row, an exclusive interview with Guy Burgess, sexism at the Oscars and Stan Laurel's birthday.

  • S2015E37 24/02/2015

    • February 24, 2015
    • BBC Two

    The stories behind the day's headlines with Evan Davis. Have the Green party blown up on the election launch pad? Malcolm Rifkind, Greece, Qatar's Christmas World Cup, and Mark Rylance talks Wolf Hall at the Tower of London.

  • S2015E38 25/02/2015

    • February 25, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E39 26/02/2015

    • February 26, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E40 27/02/2015

    • February 27, 2015
    • BBC Two

    An exclusive with Mohammed Emwazi's former school teacher. An interview with one of the al Jazeera journalists under arrest in Egypt. German group Pegida, accused of Islamophobia, march in Newcastle. Plus, English National Ballet perform live and the dress the world has been talking about. With Kirsty Wark.

  • SPECIAL 0x9 The Great European Disaster Movie: Newsnight Debate

    • March 1, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Robert Peston presents a discussion in which a panel of guests debate the issues raised by Annalisa Piras and Bill Emmott's authored Storyville documentary on the problems facing the European Union.

  • S2015E41 02/03/2015

    • March 2, 2015
    • BBC Two

    The stories behind the day's headlines with Evan Davis, including young people and UKIP, and Israel and Obama. Plus will young people ever be able to buy a house?

  • S2015E42 03/03/2015

    • March 3, 2015
    • BBC Two

    In-depth investigation and analysis of the stories behind the day's headlines with Evan Davis, including a preview of a film about the India bus rape that has caused a storm. Plus phone hacking, shoplifting, the right to encrypt, and does MI5 go too far?

  • S2015E43 04/03/2015

    • March 4, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E44 05/03/2015

    • March 5, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E45 06/03/2015

    • March 6, 2015
    • BBC Two

    The stories behind the day's headlines with Kirsty Wark. Why are the army buying expensive British helicopters instead of American ones? The election debates without Cameron. And a mystery third story...

  • S2015E46 09/03/2015

    • March 9, 2015
    • BBC Two

    With Evan Davis. Are the political parties relying on fear to win votes? Plus, HSBC bosses are grilled by MPs, Freida Pinto on India and gender, universal credit and poo transplants (yes, really...).

  • S2015E47 10/03/2015

    • March 10, 2015
    • BBC Two

    The former head of the army says defence spending should not be run down without a debate. Plus the family of the girls who went to Syria, a look ahead to the budget, Jeremy Clarkson suspended by the BBC and Sarah Brightman in space. With Evan Davis.

  • S2015E48 11/03/2015

    • March 11, 2015
    • BBC Two

    In-depth investigation and analysis of the stories behind the day's headlines with Evan Davis, including an interview with Boris Nemtsov's daughter. Plus Jeremy Clarkson's suspension, the record of the coalition, the strong dollar v the weak euro and maths genius Cedric Villani.

  • S2015E49 12/03/2015

    • March 12, 2015
    • BBC Two

    In-depth investigation and analysis of the stories behind the day's headlines with Laura Kuenssberg.

  • S2015E50 13/03/2015

    • March 13, 2015
    • BBC Two

    The phony election hits the leaders' kitchens. Was Ghandi nice? Julian Assange. The mystery of the lost wallet. With Kirsty Wark.

  • S2015E51 16/03/2015

    • March 16, 2015
    • BBC Two

    An exclusive report on the VIP paedophile cover-up. Is Ed Balls winning? The SNP's leader Nicola Sturgeon. Dolce and Gabbana annoy Elton John. The Israeli elections.

  • S2015E52 17/03/2015

    • March 17, 2015
    • BBC Two

    More on the VIP paedophile cover-up. Evan Davis, Duncan Weldon and Allegra Stratton on the budget. Israel's election results. Uraguay takes on Big Tobacco. The election debates.

  • S2015E53 18/03/2015

    • March 18, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Evan Davis inspects the contents of the chancellor's Budget box, with expert political and economic analysis of the 2015 Budget.

  • S2015E54 19/03/2015

    • March 19, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Reaction to the Tunisia gun attack, the latest fallout from the budget, Fatima Bhutto on the outcry over a Pakistani man on death row, and 'the end' of classical music. With Laura Kuenssberg.

  • S2015E55 20/03/2015

    • March 20, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E56 23/03/2015

    • March 23, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Cameron quits - in five years time. Why? Labour's second front in Scotland. Ségolène Royal. Cannabis and cancer. Henry Kissinger on Lee Kuan Yew.

  • S2015E57 24/03/2015

    • March 24, 2015
    • BBC Two

    The latest on the plane crash in the Alps. Runners & riders for Tory leadership. Could the army retake the Falklands? Does cannabis cure cancer? Whatever happened to the pop charts?

  • S2015E58 25/03/2015

    • March 25, 2015
    • BBC Two

    With Emily Maitlis. Jeremy Clarkson dropped by the BBC, tax wars, Ayan Hirsi Ali, Clarke Carlisle and Richard III.

  • S2015E59 26/03/2015

    • March 26, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E60 27/03/2015

    • March 27, 2015
    • BBC Two

    With Evan Davis. The latest on the plane crash in the Alps, plus the Nigerian elections, the last piano on Gaza and Benedict Cumberbatch live in the studio.

  • S2015E61 30/03/2015

    • March 30, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Election Day 1: Newsnight looks underneath the soundbites to work out what's really happening. And Juliet Stevenson reads the last letter of Virginia Woolf. With Evan Davis.

  • S2015E62 31/03/2015

    • March 31, 2015
    • BBC Two

    The shadow business secretary on zero-hours contracts. Emily's election marathon. Data protection pensioners row. Syria's children speak. And Caitlin Moran from beyond the grave. With Evan Davis.

  • S2015E63 01/04/2015

    • April 1, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Conservative and Labour business backers go head-to-head, the latest on the Iran nuclear talks and an interview with influential Bowling Alone author Robert Putnam. With Emily Maitlis.

  • S2015E64 02/04/2015

    • April 2, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Live expert and political reaction to the leader debates from the Salford 'spin room' and the latest on the Iran nuclear deal. Plus, why is sex going out of fashion? With Evan Davis and Laura Kuenssberg.

  • S2015E65 07/04/2015

    • April 7, 2015
    • BBC Two

    In-depth investigation and analysis of the stories behind the day's headlines with Evan Davis. Including live reaction to the Scottish leaders' debate, Michael Gove live, the NHS funding deficit, and British 'jihadi brides'. Plus, the end of the phone charger?

  • S2015E66 08/04/2015

    • April 8, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E67 09/04/2015

    • April 9, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Do personal attacks in election campaigns win votes? A new Conservative policy on rail prices is revealed; US gay 'conversional therapy' row; the man who could succeed Raúl Castro; and an interview with artist Gillian Ayres.

  • S2015E68 10/04/2015

    • April 10, 2015
    • BBC Two

    A commitment from the Tories on health. Turmoil in Yemen. Plus the latest instalment of This House and the art of the commentator. With Kirsty Wark.

  • S2015E69 13/04/2015

    • April 13, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Analysis of the stories behind the day's headlines with Evan Davis and Kirsty Wark. The Labour manifesto is analysed, Evan interviews Nick Clegg, and Gunter Grass is remembered.

  • S2015E70 14/04/2015

    • April 14, 2015
    • BBC Two

    In-depth investigation and analysis of the stories behind the day's headlines with Emily Maitlis. The Conservative and Green party manifestos are analysed, blackmail porn is discussed, and was the Hatton Garden heist based on a book?

  • S2015E71 15/04/2015

    • April 15, 2015
    • BBC Two

    One-to-one with the prime minister - Newsnight's panel pass judgment. Reports from the UKIP and Liberal Democrats manifesto launches, David Laws live, and Jake Yapp breaks down the manifestos, musically.

  • S2015E72 Newsnight in Northern Ireland

    • May 16, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Evan Davis presents a special election edition of Newsnight from Belfast - with leading figures from the largest Northern Ireland parties. How are the profound changes reverberating through UK politics manifesting themselves in Northern Ireland, with its unique political history? And in this extraordinarily tight election, what cards could the Northern Ireland parties hold in the event of a hung parliament - and how would they play them? In this special Newsnight from Broadcasting House in Belfast, Evan Davis analyses and debates all the issues with key players from the five largest parties. Laura Kuenssberg is in the studio in London.

  • S2015E73 17/04/2015

    • April 17, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E74 20/04/2015

    • April 20, 2015
    • BBC Two

    The latest from Lampedusa as six new migrant boats are shipwrecked. Plus Evan Davis grills Ed Miliband and the election war on twitter. With Emily Maitlis.

  • S2015E75 21/04/2015

    • April 21, 2015
    • BBC Two

    A close up look at the welfare system to see if the benefit reforms are fair. And is Conservative chairman Grant Shapps a Wikipedia 'sock puppet'? He says not. With Emily Maitlis.

  • S2015E76 22/04/2015

    • April 22, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Nigel Farage interview, Gordon Brown rears his head, on the campaign trail with George Osborne, and immigration - what has it done for us? With Emily Maitlis.

  • S2015E77 23/04/2015

    • April 23, 2015
    • BBC Two

    In-depth investigation and analysis of the stories behind the day's headlines, with Laura Kuenssberg in Scotland and Evan Davis in the studio. DPP Alison Saunders on historic child abuse. Plus Nicola Sturgeon, EU crisis talks on migrants and a peek inside the ancient Chauvet caves.

  • S2015E78 24/04/2015

    • April 24, 2015
    • BBC Two

    With Kirsty Wark. No Lib Dem deal with the SNP. The gloves come off on foreign policy. We visit voters in Wales and talk to Leanne Wood. Plus the latest instalment of This House Believes.

  • S2015E79 27/04/2015

    • April 27, 2015
    • BBC Two

    An exclusive interview with the teen girls held hostage for 10 years by a neighbour. Plus Nicola Sturgeon, Lord Oakeshott and the latest on Nepal. With Evan Davis and Kirsty Wark.

  • S2015E80 28/04/2015

    • April 28, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E81 29/04/2015

    • April 29, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E82 30/04/2015

    • April 30, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E83 01/05/2015

    • May 1, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E84 05/05/2015

    • May 5, 2015
    • BBC Two

    In-depth investigation and analysis of the stories behind the day's headlines, with Evan Davis on location and Kirsty Wark in Scotland.

  • S2015E85 06/05/2015

    • May 6, 2015
    • BBC Two

    A special 60-minute programme on the final day of campaigning before the general election. Michael Cockerell profiles Ed Miliband, and Matthew d'Ancona profiles David Cameron. With Evan Davis.

  • S2015E86 08/05/2015

    • May 8, 2015
    • BBC Two

    In-depth investigation and analysis of the stories behind the day's headlines, with Evan Davis in the studio and Kirsty Wark in Scotland. Detailed analysis of how and why the Conservatives won the most unexpected of parliamentary majorities.

  • S2015E87 11/05/2015

    • May 11, 2015
    • BBC Two

    In-depth investigation and analysis of the stories behind the day's headlines with Evan Davis. Stories include a look at why the polls were wrong, and the pollster who got them right. Plus the reshuffle, Labour leadership, the SNP come to town and Greece.

  • S2015E88 12/05/2015

    • May 12, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Here comes the Euro Referendum. Who's the most nervous? Labour leadership. Simon Hughes on getting the sack. Kevin Pietersen.

  • S2015E89 13/05/2015

    • May 13, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Evan Davis talks to Labour leadership candidate Liz Kendall. Plus Prince Charles' 'black spider' letters debated, Europe's migrant trafficking and on board the largest ever British-registered cargo ship.

  • S2015E90 14/05/2015

    • May 14, 2015
    • BBC Two

    An interview with Unite union leader Len McClusky on Labour's election defeat, UKIP's internal battles, new powers for cities and the artist David Hockney. With Emily Maitlis.

  • S2015E91 15/05/2015

    • May 15, 2015
    • BBC Two

    The Labour leadership race hots up and one of the favourites gets out. What's it like to lose your seat? Remembering BB King. And Star Wars over Dubai. With Emily Maitlis.

  • S2015E92 18/05/2015

    • May 18, 2015
    • BBC Two

    The Pentagon's Iraq adviser during the occupation shares her regrets; Israel's elder statesman and former premier Shimon Peres shares his. And David Cameron's former adviser on how Britain can do better.

  • S2015E93 19/05/2015

    • May 19, 2015
    • BBC Two

    As we slide into deflation, is inflation just around the corner? Keir Starmer. Are there too many gardens and not enough houses? And California's fourth year of drought. With Evan Davis.

  • S2015E94 20/05/2015

    • May 20, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Alex Salmond on Europe, James Rhodes on the book his wife tried to ban, gay marriage in Ireland, May meets the police federation and the books of Bin Laden. With Evan Davis.

  • S2015E95 21/05/2015

    • May 21, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Laura Kuenssberg with the latest on the Labour leadership contest, phone hacking at the Daily Mirror and the government's surveillance report, as well as a live interview with Danny Boyle. Plus the latest on Nepal's disaster-torn villages. And should Oxford University axe its uniforms?

  • S2015E96 22/05/2015

    • May 22, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E97 26/05/2015

    • May 26, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Evan Davis looks at what is likely to be in the Queen's Speech, holds an exclusive interview with Chuka Umunna and examines the latest about a murdered prosecutor in Argentina. Plus architect Zaha Hadid and Freakonomics.

  • S2015E98 27/05/2015

    • May 27, 2015
    • BBC Two

    The latest on the FIFA corruption arrests, what to make of the Queen's Speech, national identity at the Hay Festival and the legal status of chimps. With Kirsty Wark.

  • S2015E99 28/05/2015

    • May 28, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E100 29/05/2015

    • May 29, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E164 27/08/2015

    • August 27, 2015
    • BBC Two

  • S2015E224 25/11/2015

    • November 25, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Analysis of the autumn statement, an interview with new Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau, and Newsnight's guide to Chairman Mao. With Evan Davis.

Season 2016

Season 2017

Season 2019

Season 2020

  • S2020E01 06/01/2020

    • January 6, 2020
    • BBC Two

    Does Iran look like a country ready to deescalate? As Trump threatens more to come, how much influence does Britain wield in the post-Brexit world? And the latest on the Labour leadership contest. Emily Maitlis presenting.

  • S2020E02 07/01/2020

    • January 7, 2020
    • BBC Two

    As the Labour leadership race gets underway, Emily talks to one of the candidates. Plus, the cyber kidnap of Travellex; and what does the future hold for British film?

  • S2020E03 08/01/2020

    • January 8, 2020
    • BBC Two

    With Emily Maitlis. What does the departure of Harry and Meghan tell us about the monarchy – and the country? Plus, Iran.

  • S2020E04 09/01/2020

    • January 9, 2020
    • BBC Two

    Did Iran itself shoot down a passenger plane that crashed in Tehran? Is the Queen taking charge in the Harry/Meghan row? Can cinema beat the streamers?

  • S2020E05 10/01/2020

    • January 10, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The day's important national and international news stories with Mark Urban. Sinn Fein and DUP in Northern Ireland restore power sharing. The latest on the Iranian plane crash.

  • S2020E06 13/01/2020

    • January 13, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E07 14/01/2020

    • January 14, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E08 15/01/2020

    • January 15, 2020
    • BBC Two

    A landmark report says it’s officially the warmest decade ever but how serious is the UK government about tackling the climate crisis? Also, how much did cultural factors, including religion, play in recent grooming scandals? The Home office has a report with some answers but is refusing to publish them. Emma Barnett finds out why.

  • S2020E09 16/01/2020

    • January 16, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The Labour leadership contest heats up. After his run in with the courts over Brexit, how will the PM rein in Judicial Review? Scunthorpe and the government plans for the north.

  • S2020E10 17/01/2020

    • January 17, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The Labour leadership race. What will happen to the HS2 rail scheme? Psychic spoon bender Uri Geller applies to join the British Civil Service.

  • S2020E11 20/01/2020

    • January 20, 2020
    • BBC Two

  • S2020E12 21/01/2020

    • January 21, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The latest on the Trump impeachment trial, the Labour leadership race, Australian ex-PM Malcolm Turnbull live, and HS2 latest. Plus Manchester grooming survivors talk.

  • S2020E13 22/01/2020

    • January 22, 2020
    • BBC Two

    Will we fight Trump over taxing Google and Amazon? The increase in infant mortality. Rose McGowan on the Weinstein trial. We remember Monty Python’s Terry Jones.

  • S2020E14 23/01/2020

    • January 23, 2020
    • BBC Two

    Why is Britain funding fossil fuel projects abroad. Should we be scared of Coronavirus? John Bercow bullying allegations - should he get his peerage?

  • S2020E15 24/01/2020

    • January 24, 2020
    • BBC Two

    With Katie Razzall. Could we cope with a global pandemic? Also the latest on the Labour leadership fight, and citizens’ assemblies.

  • S2020E16 27/01/2020

    • January 27, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E17 28/01/2020

    • January 28, 2020
    • BBC Two

    President Trump's Middle East plan. Is it a plan for peace or political survival? Also tonight, latest on political fallout after the UK government allows Huawei a role in the UK's 5G mobile networks. We will also have China's telecoms giant live in the studio. With Emily Maitlis.

  • S2020E18 29/01/2020

    • January 29, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E19 30/01/2020

    • January 30, 2020
    • BBC Two

    Coronovirus is declared a global health emergency. We expose the true depth of the NHS crisis. John Bercow and bullying. Ireland’s Finance Minister on Brexit. The tribes fighting logging in the Amazon.

  • S2020E20 31/01/2020 - Brexitnight: A Newsnight Special

    • January 31, 2020
  • S2020E21 03/02/2020

    • February 3, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The day's important national and international news stories with Emily Maitlis and Emma Barnett.

  • S2020E22 04/02/2020

    • February 4, 2020
    • BBC Two

    How coherent is the government's approach to climate policy?

  • S2020E23 05/02/2020

    • February 5, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The government threatens the BBC licence fee. Donald Trump wins his senate impeachment vote. Could Sinn Fein take power in the Irish Republic? The prejudice that tough guys can’t get bullied.

  • S2020E24 06/02/2020

    • February 6, 2020
    • BBC Two

    On the eve of a deportation flight to Jamaica, we’ve got a leaked copy of the Windrush report suggesting the government overhauls the law. Are we reacting properly to Coronovirus? US chat show host Rachel Maddow. Who can stop Keir Starmer?

  • S2020E25 07/02/2020

    • February 7, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E26 10/02/2020

    • February 10, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E27 11/02/2020

    • February 11, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E28 12/02/2020

    • February 12, 2020
    • BBC Two

    Katie Razzall hosts the first televised Labour leadership debate.

  • S2020E29 13/02/2020

    • February 13, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The fallout from the chancellor's shock resignation. And a report from Jamaica meeting someone sent back by the government to a country they only lived in as a child.

  • S2020E30 14/02/2020

    • February 14, 2020
    • BBC Two

    Newsnight learns details of contingency plans being drawn up to deal with Coronovirus in the UK. And how does the reshuffle recast the future of British government?

  • S2020E31 17/02/2020

    • February 17, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E32 18/02/2020

    • February 18, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E33 19/02/2020

    • February 19, 2020
    • BBC Two

    What does the government promise to level up inequality really mean? Can billionaire Bloomberg buy the US election? And the story of a hijab, a chess player and the Iranian government.

  • S2020E34 20/02/2020

    • February 20, 2020
    • BBC Two

    We’re in Brussels seeing if a Canada Brexit is still on offer. The latest on the shootings in Germany and the new right. Voting begins in the labour leadership ballot.

  • S2020E35 21/02/2020

    • February 21, 2020
    • BBC Two

    Could coronavirus change the way the global economy works? Plus the ex-Google exec who says the firm has lost its moral compass, and Civil Service reform.

  • S2020E36 24/02/2020

    • February 24, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E37 25/02/2020

    • February 25, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E38 26/02/2020

    • February 26, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E39 27/02/2020

    • February 27, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The Brexit negotiation documents are published. How will Brussels react? Heathrow runway 3 is blocked. What now? And Booker prize-winning Irish author Anne Enright.

  • S2020E40 28/02/2020

    • February 28, 2020
    • BBC Two

    As the consequences of Coronavirus grow clearer, we ask the gvt if they’re doing enough. The danger to teens in unregulated care homes.

  • S2020E41 02/03/2020

    • March 2, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E42 03/03/2020

    • March 3, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E43 04/03/2020

    • March 4, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The latest on the Coronavirus. How do you keep the public in the picture? And Joe Biden wins the Super Tuesday Primaries, can he beat Sanders and then Trump? With Emily Maitlis.

  • S2020E44 05/03/2020

    • March 5, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E45 06/03/2020

    • March 6, 2020

    The latest on Coronavirus – how might the government use next week’s Budget to address the economic impact? Plus anti-migrant vigilantes in Greece.

  • S2020E46 09/03/2020

    • March 9, 2020
    • BBC Two

    On a new Black Monday for the stock market, should the government be doing more to tackle coronavirus? Also, the tensions behind the Delhi riots. With Emily Maitlis.

  • S2020E47 10/03/2020

    • March 10, 2020
    • BBC Two

    With Italy in Coronavirus lockdown, is this where Britain could be in two weeks’ time? Emily Maitlis hears from experts across Europe. Plus, Katie Razzall is in Blackpool, which has an older demographic to explore if our response so far shows a creeping ageism in our society.

  • S2020E48 11/03/2020

    • March 11, 2020
    • BBC Two

    With Emily Maitlis. The latest on the government’s coronavirus plans. Austerity ends with a bang in the Budget. And Harvey Weinstein.

  • S2020E49 12/03/2020

    • March 12, 2020
    • BBC Two

    Coronavirus is “the worst public health crisis for a generation" according to the prime minister. How does the government’s response stack up? We speak to politicians and medical experts.

  • S2020E50 13/03/2020

    • March 13, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E51 16/03/2020

    • March 16, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E52 17/03/2020

    • March 17, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E53 18/03/2020

    • March 18, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E54 19/03/2020

    • March 19, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E55 20/03/2020

    • March 20, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E56 23/03/2020

    • March 23, 2020
  • S2020E57 24/03/2020

    • March 24, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E58 25/03/2020

    • March 25, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E59 26/03/2020

    • March 26, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E60 27/03/2020

    • March 27, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E61 30/03/2020

    • March 30, 2020
    • BBC Two

    With Emily Maitlis. Is social distancing working? Plus new measures taken by police forces, and Hungary.

  • S2020E62 31/03/2020

    • March 31, 2020
    • BBC Two

    Why are Britain's coronavirus testing numbers so low? Plus the latest analysis on the development of the outbreak, including an analysis of the symptoms. And is politics getting in the way of an effective American response to this emergency? Emily Maitlis presents.

  • S2020E63 01/04/2020

    • April 1, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E64 02/04/2020

    • April 2, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E65 03/04/2020

    • April 3, 2020
    • BBC Two

    How long can the UK lockdown hold? How is Covid-19 impacting Britain’s food supply? And what will became of the great British Summer? Mark Urban presents.

  • S2020E66 06/04/2020

    • April 6, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E67 07/04/2020

    • April 7, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E68 08/04/2020

    • April 8, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E69 09/04/2020

    • April 9, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E70 14/04/2020

    • April 14, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E71 15/04/2020

    • April 15, 2020
    • BBC Two

    Parliament is shut and we are in the biggest crisis since the war. How do we know if the Government is getting it right? Emma Barnett presents.

  • S2020E72 16/04/2020

    • April 16, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E73 17/04/2020

    • April 17, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E74 20/04/2020

    • April 20, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E75 21/04/2020

    • April 21, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E76 22/04/2020

    • April 22, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E77 23/04/2020

    • April 23, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E78 24/04/2020

    • April 24, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The day's important national and international news stories.

  • S2020E79 27/04/2020

    • April 27, 2020
    • BBC Two

    A look at the crisis facing social care providers, and what will change now the PM is back? And in the US, Georgia begins to lift the lockdown. Emily Maitlis presents.

  • S2020E80 28/04/2020

    • April 28, 2020
    • BBC Two

    Could the lockdown entrench a life time of educational inequality for the poorest pupils? Are UK Care homes now the epicenter of the outbreak? Emily Maitlis presents.

  • S2020E81 29/04/2020

    • April 29, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The true extent of the tragedy of the coronavirus care home deaths as the figures are included in the official daily death toll, will it redefine the trajectory of how we’re coping? Also tonight, how different will our cities and spending look as we head into what could be the biggest recession the world has known? Emily Maitlis presents.

  • S2020E82 30/04/2020

    • April 30, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E83 01/05/2020

    • May 1, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E84 04/05/2020

    • May 4, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E85 05/05/2020

    • May 5, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E86 06/05/2020

    • May 6, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E87 07/05/2020

    • May 7, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The day's important national and international news stories. Emma Barnett presents.

  • S2020E88 11/05/2020

    • May 11, 2020
    • BBC Two

    With Emily Maitlis. An analysis of the government’s changed message. How is the R value calculated? And a member of the Chilcot Inquiry on a possible future Covid-19 inquiry.

  • S2020E89 12/05/2020

    • May 12, 2020
    • BBC Two

    When should schools reopen in the UK following the Coronavirus shutdown? Also tonight, what do the latest death figures tell us about our control of the pandemic – we report from the North West. And an exclusive interview with Hollywood screen legend Robert De Niro. Emily Maitlis presenting.

  • S2020E90 13/05/2020

    • May 13, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E91 14/05/2020

    • May 14, 2020
    • BBC Two

    Does the Scottish government's message to stay at home set it on a collision course with the UK government? Are whistleblowers on the Covid-19 frontline being silenced? And is the hope of a vaccine receding? Kirsty Wark presents.

  • S2020E92 15/05/2020

    • May 15, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E93 18/05/2020

    • May 18, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E94 19/05/2020

    • May 19, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E95 20/05/2020

    • May 20, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E96 21/05/2020

    • May 21, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E97 22/05/2020

    • May 22, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E98 26/05/2020

    • May 26, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The public can see the PM’s top aide broke lockdown rules, so why is the government tying itself in knots to defend him? As suspected incidents of domestic violence rise under lockdown, we go inside a refuge that is trying to help but is running out of space. Presented by Emily Maitlis.

  • S2020E99 27/05/2020

    • May 27, 2020
    • BBC Two

    With Katie Razzall. Can the government rely on people to follow the rules of their new test and trace system? Plus president Trump and Twitter.

  • S2020E100 28/05/2020

    • May 28, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E101 29/05/2020

    • May 29, 2020
    • BBC Two

    With Kirsty Wark. The government’s furlough scheme ends in October. Plus, a film from the Italian hospital that discovered Europe’s first case of Covid-19.

  • S2020E102 01/06/2020

    • June 1, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E103 02/06/2020

    • June 2, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E104 03/06/2020

    • June 3, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E105 04/06/2020

    • June 4, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The day's important national and international news stories. With Kirsty Wark

  • S2020E106 05/06/2020

    • June 5, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E107 08/06/2020

    • June 8, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E108 09/06/2020

    • June 9, 2020
    • BBC Two

    Why has the government in England given up finding a way to get pupils back to school before the autumn? With Kirsty Wark.

  • S2020E109 10/06/2020

    • June 10, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E110 11/06/2020

    • June 11, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E111 12/06/2020

    • June 12, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E112 15/06/2020

    • June 15, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E113 16/06/2020

    • June 16, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E114 17/06/2020

    • June 17, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E115 18/06/2020

    • June 18, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E116 19/06/2020

    • June 19, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E117 22/06/2020

    • June 22, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E118 23/06/2020

    • June 23, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E119 24/06/2020

    • June 24, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E120 25/06/2020

    • June 25, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E121 26/06/2020

    • June 26, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E122 29/06/2020

    • June 29, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E123 30/06/2020

    • June 30, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E124 01/07/2020

    • July 1, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E125 02/07/2020

    • July 2, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E126 03/07/2020

    • July 3, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E127 06/07/2020

    • July 6, 2020
    • BBC Two

    What can we expect from the Chancellor's first economic statement since Coronavirus? The programme has the latest on the Ghislaine Maxwell case from America. Plus new research on coronavirus and antibodies in children, and the death of composer Ennio Morricone. Emily Maitlis presents.

  • S2020E128 07/07/2020

    • July 7, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E129 08/07/2020

    • July 8, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The Chancellor unveils yet more economic stimulus. Is it enough to keep Britain’s Covid hit economy on its feet? Emily Maitlis presents.

  • S2020E130 09/07/2020

    • July 9, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E131 10/07/2020

    • July 10, 2020
    • BBC Two

    With Kirsty Wark. Why have masks become such a battleground? Plus is it the summer of 'cancel culture'?

  • S2020E132 13/07/2020

    • July 13, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E133 14/07/2020

    • July 14, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E134 15/07/2020

    • July 15, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E135 16/07/2020

    • July 16, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E136 17/07/2020

    • July 17, 2020
    • BBC Two

    As the prime minister sets out plans for further easing of coronavirus restrictions in England, could it all be over by Christmas? Also, Jarvis Cocker talks releasing new music in the Covid era. Mark Urban presents.

  • S2020E137 20/07/2020

    • July 20, 2020
    • BBC Two

    Is this a turning point for global foreign policy towards China? Good news on a possible vaccine. Also, Johnny Depp and Amber Heard. With Emily Maitlis.

  • S2020E138 21/07/2020

    • July 21, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E139 22/07/2020

    • July 22, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The prime minister heads to Scotland tomorrow in an effort to strengthen the Union. But is it enough to keep the independence campaign at bay? Emily Maitlis presents.

  • S2020E140 23/07/2020

    • July 23, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E141 24/07/2020

    • July 24, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The government unveils its new obesity strategy. With Kirsty Wark.

  • S2020E142 27/07/2020

    • July 27, 2020
    • BBC Two

    An exclusive report with the London Metropolitan Police. Emily Maitlis presents.

  • S2020E143 28/07/2020

    • July 28, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E144 29/07/2020

    • July 29, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The day's important national and international news stories. The leaders of Big Tech face the US Congress. Railton Road Low Traffic Neighbourhood. With Emily Maitlis.

  • S2020E145 30/07/2020

    • July 30, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E146 31/07/2020

    • July 31, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The PM puts the easing of lockdown restrictions on hold. With Mark Urban.

  • S2020E147 03/08/2020

    • August 3, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E148 04/08/2020

    • August 4, 2020
    • BBC Two

    As hundreds are injured in an explosion in Beirut, how will crisis-hit Lebanon respond? Kirsty Wark presents.

  • S2020E149 05/08/2020

    • August 5, 2020
    • BBC Two

    Coronavirus cases appear to be on the rise once more but is the danger that the virus poses as grave as we once thought? Kirsty Wark presents.

  • S2020E150 06/08/2020

    • August 6, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The day's important national and international news stories. With Emma Barnett

  • S2020E151 07/08/2020

    • August 7, 2020
    • BBC Two

    As a record number of migrants cross the English Channel by boat in one day, does the UK have control over its borders? Mark Urban presents.

  • S2020E152 10/08/2020

    • August 10, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E153 11/08/2020

    • August 11, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E154 12/08/2020

    • August 12, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E155 13/08/2020

    • August 13, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E156 14/08/2020

    • August 14, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E157 17/08/2020

    • August 17, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E158 18/08/2020

    • August 18, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E159 19/08/2020

    • August 19, 2020
    • BBC Two

    As the prospect of local lockdown looms over yet more towns and cities, what is the best way to manage coronavirus outbreaks locally?

  • S2020E160 20/08/2020

    • August 20, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E161 21/08/2020

    • August 21, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E162 24/08/2020

    • August 24, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E163 25/08/2020

    • August 25, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E164 26/08/2020

    • August 26, 2020
    • BBC Two

    As Donald Trump prepares for his big speech at the Republican National Convention, what does the US president need to do to secure a second term? With Katie Razzall.

  • S2020E165 27/08/2020

    • August 27, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E166 28/08/2020

    • August 28, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E167 01/09/2020

    • September 1, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E168 02/09/2020

    • September 2, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E169 03/09/2020

    • September 3, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E170 04/09/2020

    • September 4, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E171 07/09/2020

    • September 7, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E172 08/09/2020

    • September 8, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E173 09/09/2020

    • September 9, 2020
    • BBC Two

  • S2020E174 10/09/2020

    • September 10, 2020

    Are new coronavirus rules an unnecessary restriction on our freedom? The latest on UK-EU trade talks and the death of Diana Rigg. With Kirsty Wark.

  • S2020E175 11/09/2020

    • September 11, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E176 14/09/2020

    • September 14, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E177 15/09/2020

    • September 15, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E178 16/09/2020

    • September 16, 2020
    • BBC Two

    How are vulnerable children coping with the return to school? And Britain’s testing system under strain. With Emily Maitlis.

  • S2020E179 17/09/2020

    • September 17, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E180 18/09/2020

    • September 18, 2020
    • BBC Two

    As the prime minister says the country is seeing a second wave of coronavirus, will we see a return to lockdown?

  • S2020E181 21/09/2020

    • September 21, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The UK’s Covid alert level is upgraded. Katie Razzall reports live from Sheffield Hallam as universities return. With Emily Maitlis.

  • S2020E182 22/09/2020

    • September 22, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E183 23/09/2020

    • September 23, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E184 24/09/2020

    • September 24, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The chancellor’s new emergency job scheme is announced, but who will he save? What happens in America when you witness police brutality? And the chief executive of the Royal Academy on funding the arts through the pandemic.

  • S2020E185 25/09/2020

    • September 25, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E186 28/09/2020

    • September 28, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E187 29/09/2020

    • September 29, 2020
    • BBC Two

  • S2020E188 30/09/2020

    • September 30, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E189 01/10/2020

    • October 1, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E190 02/10/2020

    • October 2, 2020
    • BBC Two

    With Kirsty Wark, discussing how the US election is thrown into turmoil after President Trump and the First Lady test positive for Covid-19.

  • S2020E191 05/10/2020

    • October 5, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E192 06/10/2020

    • October 6, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E193 07/10/2020

    • October 7, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E194 08/10/2020

    • October 8, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E195 09/10/2020

    • October 9, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E196 12/10/2020

    • October 12, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E197 13/10/2020

    • October 13, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E198 14/10/2020

    • October 14, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E199 15/10/2020

    • October 15, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E200 16/10/2020

    • October 16, 2020
    • BBC Two

    With Faisal Islam. Number 10 says trade talks with the EU are over. Also, the prime minister threatens to impose Covid-19 restrictions on Greater Manchester.

  • S2020E201 19/10/2020

    • October 19, 2020
    • BBC Two

  • S2020E202 20/10/2020

    • October 20, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E203 21/10/2020

    • October 21, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E204 22/10/2020

    • October 22, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E205 23/10/2020

    • October 23, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The day's important national and international news stories with Faisal Islam.

  • S2020E206 26/10/2020

    • October 26, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E207 27/10/2020

    • October 27, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E208 28/10/2020

    • October 28, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E209 29/10/2020

    • October 29, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E210 30/10/2020

    • October 30, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E211 02/11/2020

    • November 2, 2020
    • BBC Two

    With Mark Urban in London and Emily Maitlis in Washington DC. The UK approaches another lockdown. And is democracy on the ballot in the US election?

  • S2020E212 03/11/2020

    • November 3, 2020
    • BBC Two

  • S2020E213 04/11/2020

    • November 4, 2020
    • BBC Two

  • S2020E214 05/11/2020

    • November 5, 2020
    • BBC Two

    Important national and international news stories. With Emily Maitlis and Emma Barnett.

  • S2020E215 06/11/2020

    • November 6, 2020
    • BBC Two

    Joe Biden closes in on the US presidency. Will he be the 46th President? With Emily Maitlis from Washington DC and Kirsty Wark in London.

  • S2020E216 09/11/2020

    • November 9, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E217 10/11/2020

    • November 10, 2020
    • BBC Two

    As Wales decides to scrap summer exams, should England follow suit? Plus the latest from America and was it right to commemorate feminist philosopher Mary Wollstonecraft with a naked female form? Emma Barnett presents.

  • S2020E218 11/11/2020

    • November 11, 2020
    • BBC Two

    The UK has become the first country in Europe to pass 50,000 coronavirus deaths. With Kirsty Wark.

  • S2020E219 12/11/2020

    • November 12, 2020
    • BBC Two

    As a split emerges at the heart of Downing Street, how will the prime minister adapt?

  • S2020E220 13/11/2020

    • November 13, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E221 16/11/2020

    • November 16, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E222 17/11/2020

    • November 17, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E223 18/11/2020

    • November 18, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E224 19/11/2020

    • November 19, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E225 20/11/2020

    • November 20, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E226 23/11/2020

    • November 23, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E227 24/11/2020

    • November 24, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E228 25/11/2020

    • November 25, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E229 26/11/2020

    • November 26, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E230 27/11/2020

    • November 27, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E231 30/11/2020

    • December 30, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E232 01/12/2020

    • December 1, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E233 02/12/2020

    • December 2, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E234 03/12/2020

    • December 3, 2020
    • BBC Two
  • S2020E235 04/12/2020

    • December 4, 2020
    • BBC Two

  • S2020E236 07/12/2020

    • December 7, 2020
    • BBC Two

  • S2020E237 08/12/2020

    • December 8, 2020
    • BBC Two

  • S2020E238 09/12/2020

    • December 9, 2020
    • BBC Two

  • S2020E239 10/12/2020

    • December 10, 2020
    • BBC Two

    Important national and international news stories. With Kirsty Wark.

  • S2020E240 11/12/2020

    • December 11, 2020
    • BBC Two

    Important national and international news stories. With Kirst Wark.

  • S2020E241 14/12/2020

    • December 14, 2020
    • BBC Two

  • S2020E242 15/12/2020

    • December 15, 2020
    • BBC Two

  • S2020E243 16/12/2020

    • December 16, 2020
    • BBC Two

  • S2020E244 17/12/2020

    • December 17, 2020
    • BBC Two

  • S2020E245 18/12/2020

    • December 18, 2020
    • BBC Two

Season 2021

Season 2024

  • S2024E01 The Eve of the Longest-Ever NHS Strike

    • January 2, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Tomorrow will see the start of the longest strike in NHS history. Junior doctors in England will go on strike for six days. Newsnight looks at what the impact could be.

  • S2024E02 2024's Political and Economic Outlook

    • January 3, 2024
    • BBC Two

    With 2024 set to be an election year, what will the economic backdrop be and how will the parties line up? Nick Watt and Ben Chu assess the political and economic weather.

  • S2024E03 An Autumn Election...Probably

    • January 4, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Armando Iannucci is in the studio as the PM indicates the election is months away, and Keir Starmer sets out his stall. With Victoria Derbyshire.

  • S2024E04 US Election Speeches

    • January 5, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Trump and Biden's first speeches of this election year, the NHS's policy problems, and Sophie Ellis-Bextor on her 2001 hit's return to the charts. With Victoria Derbyshire.

  • S2024E05 Post Office: Will Justice Be Delivered?

    • January 8, 2024
    • BBC Two

    As the Post Office scandal dominates politics, the real Alan Bates and the writer of ITV's Mr Bates vs The Post Office are live on the programme. With Kirsty Wark.

  • S2024E06 Post Office Scandal Fallout

    • January 9, 2024
    • BBC Two

    As former boss Paula Vennells says she will hand back her CBE, Newsnight looks at the ongoing fallout from the Post Office scandal. Plus Trump's bid for immunity from prosecution. With Kirsty Wark.

  • S2024E07 The Post Office Scandal

    • January 10, 2024
    • BBC Two

    The PM promises new laws to deal with the Post Office scandal. Victoria Derbyshire presents a live Newsnight special talking to sub-postmasters, politicians and campaigners.

  • S2024E08 Will UK and America Bomb Yemen?

    • January 11, 2024
    • BBC Two

    The cabinet meets to discuss military attacks on the Houthi faction in Yemen after they create chaos in the Red Sea. Will it lead to a wider conflict? Also, testimony from a Post Office fraud investigator. How did the organisation fail so badly? With Victoria Derbyshire.

  • S2024E09 The Red Sea Missile War

    • January 12, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Another missile attack on Red Sea shipping, after dozens of bombs from British and American jets drop on the Houthi in Yemen. A strike for stability or a step towards escalation?

  • S2024E10 Who Wins the First Race to Become the US 2024 Republican Candidate?

    • January 15, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Republicans in Iowa will be the first to vote for who they want as their presidential candidate in the 2024 US election. With Victoria Derbyshire.

  • S2024E11 Rebels With a Cause

    • January 16, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Two Conservative deputy chairmen resign over the government's Rwanda Bill. Has this damaged Rishi Sunak's authority? With Victoria Derbyshire.

  • S2024E12 Rishi and Rwanda: The Big Vote

    • January 17, 2024
    • BBC Two

    The Rwanda migration bill is in the Commons with a Tory rebellion bubbling under. Will the PM's plans get past MPs, or will he have to rethink? The migration minister and Jacob Rees-Mogg have reaction to the numbers. With Victoria Derbyshire.

  • S2024E13 Doug in a Hole?

    • January 18, 2024
    • BBC Two

    A Newsnight investigation into Doug Barrowman - husband of Michelle Mone - and his involvement in a tax avoidance scheme. With Kirsty Wark.

  • S2024E14 Paying For Net Zero

    • January 19, 2024
    • BBC Two

    As the world transitions to a zero carbon future, who pays the cost? Port Talbot has announced the closure of two emissions-heavy furnaces that employ thousands of workers, and we're in Scotland where the closure of the Grangemouth oil refinery is also putting jobs at risk .

  • S2024E15 Hostage Families Meet UK Leaders

    • January 22, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Israeli hostage families meet UK political leaders, demanding they put pressure on Qatar to 'pick a side' as Hamas-run health ministry says the death toll in Gaza reaches 25,000.

  • S2024E16 Grtenfell: The Long Fight for Justice

    • January 23, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Survivors and bereaved relatives of the Grenfell Tower fire have described their loss and trauma to the companies many blame for the tragedy. Have the families been failed?

  • S2024E17 700 days of war in Ukraine

    • January 24, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Ukraine doesn't deny shooting down a Russian plane inside Russia, which Moscow says was carrying Ukrainian prisoners. With western support already stalled, where is the war heading?

  • S2024E18 Fresh Post Office Allegations

    • January 25, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Newsnight looks at the accounts of postmasters who suffered traumatic armed robberies, only to be investigated and in some cases faced demands from the Post Office to cover the losses of the stolen money.

  • S2024E19 Will ICJ Ruling Change Anything?

    • January 26, 2024
    • BBC Two

    What impact will the ruling that Israel must take all measures to prevent genocidal acts in Gaza have, as talks over a ceasefire and hostage release get underway? With Faisal Islam.

  • S2024E20 Drone Strikes: How should the US respond?

    • January 29, 2024
    • BBC Two

    As Republicans in the US call for President Biden to strike against Iran, can the president retaliate without escalating tension in the Middle East?

  • S2024E21 Done deal in Northern Ireland?

    • January 30, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Stormont looks ready to assemble again after nearly two years, following a new deal approved by the DUP - but what are the details?

  • S2024E22 Donaldson's Big Gamble

    • January 31, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Can the DUP's Sir Jeffrey Donaldson take his party with him into the new power-sharing arrangement in Northern Ireland?

  • S2024E23 Manhunt Underway After 'Acid Attack'

    • February 1, 2024
    • BBC Two

    A woman and her two daughters were attacked by a man with a corrosive substance, with the police hunting a suspect known to the victims. How common are these attacks and what can be done to stop violence against women in the UK?

  • S2024E24 The alkali attack manhunt

    • February 2, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Two days on, how has Abdul Ezedi managed to evade arrest? In Newcastle, where Ezedi lives, we ask if the asylum seeker system fit for purpose. Plus Eddie Kadi and Morravey on Afrobeats being recognised at the Grammys.

  • S2024E25 King Charles Announcement

    • February 5, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Reaction to the King's cancer diagnosis. Is the Palace taking a new approach to discussing the monarch's health?

  • S2024E26 'Scandal Bigger Than Thalidomide' Payout?

    • February 6, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Parents of thousands of children born with disabilities after their mothers took the drug Valproate to control their epilepsy have been campaigning for a new compensation scheme.

  • S2024E27 A Defining Moment For Labour?

    • February 7, 2024
    • BBC Two

    The Labour Party are to scale back their plan to invest £28 billion in green policies if they win the general election expected this year. Has Keir Starmer bowed too readily to criticism from opponents or moved sensibly to protect his party's economic credibility?

  • S2024E28 Labour's £28bn U-turn

    • February 8, 2024
    • BBC Two

    The fallout from Labour's £28bn U-turn on green spending. Are they still planning to spend the money without making it a pledge? Our editors pore over the politics, the economics and the net zero implications.

  • S2024E29 Jailed Imran Khan 'wins' Pakistan Election

    • February 9, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Pakistan is in political turmoil yet again. Despite the Muslim League's Nawaz Sharif claiming a fourth victory, it's claimed independents loyal to his rival - the jailed Imran Khan who is not allowed to campaign under his party's name - have emerged as the largest political force.

  • S2024E30 Labout Ditches Rochdale Candidate

    • February 12, 2024
    • BBC Two

    The party says they received information about new comments allegedly made by Azhar Ali. Where does this leave Keir Starmer's mission to "rip out anti-Semitism by its roots"?

  • S2024E31 Rafah Assault By Israel Looms

    • February 13, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Tensions rise over a possible Israeli offensive on Rafah as the UN warns it could lead to a slaughter.

  • S2024E32 Antisemitism in politics

    • February 14, 2024
    • BBC Two

    As a Conservative mayor is expelled over antisemitism, will party divisions on the Israel-Gaza war erupt over a ceasefire vote?

  • S2024E33 Polls Close at Two By-elections

    • February 15, 2024
    • BBC Two

    On the day Britain fell into recession, polls close in two by-elections. Will there be any crumbs of comfort for Rishi Sunak at the ballot box?

  • S2024E34 Alexei Navalny Dies in Jail

    • February 16, 2024
    • BBC Two

    The man some said Vladimir Putin wouldn't dare to kill is reported dead. Does Alexei Navalny's death show the Russian president's total power or does it give him a political headache?

  • S2024E35 Navalny's Widow Vows to Fight

    • February 17, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Following the death of her husband, Yulia Navalnaya blames president Putin. Will Russians support her call to stand with her?

  • S2024E36 Gaza Ceasefire Back on the Political Menu?

    • February 20, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Prince William calls for an 'end to the fighting' ahead of a crucial Commons vote tomorrow. Has the UK's stance on a Gaza ceasefire shifted?

  • S2024E37 Chaos in the Commons

    • February 21, 2024
    • BBC Two

    The House of Commons Speaker's defiance of convention helps solve Starmer's Gaza ceasefire vote problem. Did Lindsay Hoyle fold under pressure? Some Tories and the SNP are furious. What will the fallout be?

  • S2024E38 Can Commons Speaker Keep His Job?

    • February 22, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Pressure is building from the SNP and Conservatives following yesterday’s debate. Are concerns over MPs safety shaping the political agenda?

  • S2024E39 Is Ukraine Losing Its War?

    • February 23, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Kyiv says it is being starved of the ammunition it needs as Ukraine enters the third year of war against Russia. Will the west step up efforts against an oil-funded Russia running a full war economy?

  • S2024E40 Do the Tories Have an Islamaphobia Problem?

    • February 26, 2024
    • BBC Two

    The PM says comments made by his Conservative colleagues were ‘wrong’ but denies the party has an Islamophobia issue. Far right propaganda has surged on the dark web after the 7 October attacks. And victims of the infected blood scandal are still awaiting their compensation.

  • S2024E41 PM Warns of 'Mob Rule'

    • February 28, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Rishi Sunak has warned of attempts to 'hijack the democratic process through force itself'. He’s told police that they must use the powers that they have or risk losing the confidence of the public. Are the fears well-founded? Or is No 10 trying to make a wedge issue out of the recent protests for political gain?

  • S2024E42 How Police Failed Sarah Everard

    • February 29, 2024
    • BBC Two

    A new inquiry looking into the circumstances that led to Sarah Everard's murder highlights police failings that allowed her killer to take up high profile jobs within the Met Police, and how more than one police body 'repeatedly failed' to identify obvious warning signs.

  • S2024E43 Sunak: Galloway Victory 'Beyond Alarming'

    • March 1, 2024
    • BBC Two

    The PM responds to the Rochdale by-election result with a speech about extremism.

  • S2024E44 On the Road: 04/03/2024

    • March 4, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Ahead of the budget, Newsnight is in Doncaster East and the Isle of Axholme to hear from a live audience about their priorities and speak to a panel of politicians.

  • S2024E45 Budget Eve

    • March 5, 2024
    • BBC Two

    A look ahead to the Budget. Plus Super Tuesday in the States. And the impact of council cuts on culture.

  • S2024E46 Budget Day

    • March 6, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Tax cuts at the expense of public services? Has the budget shifted the political dial?

  • S2024E47 America Steps Into Gaza

    • March 7, 2024
    • BBC Two

    As ceasefire talks fail, Joe Biden will announce America is to build a new port on the Gaza coast, to unblock the flow of aid stuck behind the Egyptian border.

  • S2024E48 Is More Defence Spending a Luxury?

    • March 8, 2024
    • BBC Two

    In a dangerous decade for the world, must we now spend more on defence? Or should we just spend better?

  • S2024E49 On the Road: 11/03/2024

    • March 11, 2024
    • BBC Two

    In this instalment of Newsnight’s pre-general election coverage, Kirsty Wark is in Paisley and Renfrewshire North with a live audience and a panel of politicians.

  • S2024E50 Tory Donor's Alleged Remarks 'Racist'

    • March 12, 2024
    • BBC Two

    24 hours after the story broke, the prime minister has condemned remarks allegedly made by a Tory donor, about the MP Diane Abbott, as 'racist and wrong'.

  • S2024E51 Sunak's Plans to Curb 'Extremism'

    • March 13, 2024
    • BBC Two

    As the government prepares to expand its definition of extremism in response to 'a rise in extremists who are trying to hijack our democracy', will the response be proportionate or is it an attempt to score political points?

  • S2024E52 New Definition if 'Extremism'

    • March 14, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Will the PM's new rules help or hinder the fight against extremism? The government's independent reviewer of terror legislation tells us the new definition 'isn't very clear'.

  • S2024E53 Giving Russia's $300 billion to Kyiv

    • March 15, 2024
    • BBC Two

    With the G7 freezing $300 billion in Russian state assets, should all that money now be handed to Ukraine to pay for the war?

  • S2024E54 On the Road: 18/03/2024

    • March 18, 2024
    • BBC Two

    With a general election on the horizon, Newsnight hits the road again, this time in Wales. Victoria Derbyshire is in Monmouthshire with a live audience and a panel of politicians.

  • S2024E55 Newsnight

    • March 19, 2024
    • BBC Two

    The day's important national and international news stories. With Victoria Derbyshire.

  • S2024E56 Can the Rwanda Bill Save Sunak?

    • March 20, 2024
    • BBC Two

    As the PM meets his backbenchers, are the wolves circling? Or is talk of a leadership challenge overblown?

  • S2024E57 Labour's Deputy Leader and the Tax Row

    • March 21, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Labour's deputy leader Angela Rayner speaks at length to Newsnight on the question of whether she paid all the taxes due on the sale of her home.

  • S2024E58 The Princess of Wales's Cancer Announcement

    • March 22, 2024
    • BBC Two

    The Princess of Wales tells the world that she is being treated for cancer. With the King also suffering from cancer, where does that leave the day to day work of the monarchy?

  • S2024E60 Rebellion Brews over King’s Speech

    • July 16, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Labour MPs seek to force a vote on the two-child benefit cap – how much pressure is Keir Starmer under? Plus, we’re live from the Republican National Convention. With Katie Razzall.

  • S2024E61 Can Labour deliver?

    • July 17, 2024
    • BBC Two

    The King read a speech full of Keir Starmer's aspirations, but how will the new government turn manifesto promises into results?

  • S2024E62 Is time up for Biden?

    • July 18, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Joe Biden has covid while rumours sweep Washington that he's considering pulling out of the presidential race. Is it true, and when might it happen?

  • S2024E63 Biden: Digging in or getting out?

    • July 19, 2024
    • BBC Two

    Joe Biden was reportedly set to discuss an exit plan with his family, but tonight the president insists he is looking forward to more campaigning. What’s going on? Plus, the latest on the IT glitch that caused chaos across the world. With Christian Fraser.

  • S2024E64 Who is Kamala Harris?

    • July 22, 2024
    • BBC Two

    After the dramatic withdrawal of Joe Biden from the US presidential race, Newsnight asks who might win in Trump v Harris. And what do we know about the Democrats’ new presumptive nominee? With Victoria Derbyshire.

  • S2024E65 Starmer's First Rebellion

    • July 23, 2024
    • BBC Two

    The prime minister suspends seven of his MPs for voting against the government on the two-child benefit cap. What does it tell us about how Sir Keir Starmer will govern?

Additional Specials

  • SPECIAL 0x1 Obama's First Year: Reality Bites

    • January 20, 2010
    • BBC Two

    Gavin Esler presents a Newsnight special looking back at the drama and battles of Barack Obama's first year in office. Can the new president live up to his promise to bring change to America and to the world?

  • SPECIAL 0x2 Paxman meets Hitchens: A Newsnight Special

    • November 29, 2010
    • BBC Two

    In a wide-ranging special interview, Jeremy Paxman talks to Christopher Hitchens about his cancer diagnosis, his life, his politics and his writing.

  • SPECIAL 0x3 Revolution 2011

    • February 24, 2011
    • BBC Two

    As the world watches the extraordinary outbreak of unrest and protest in the Middle East and North Africa, Newsnight broadcasts a special live programme asking what it means for the region, the West and the world. The team of reporters look at common strands and differences in the protests, who the protesters are, what forms of government are likely to emerge as a result and to what extent Western relations with those governments will have to be recalibrated. Plus a discussion of recent events and what lies ahead with government players, activists and thinkers alike. Presented by Gavin Estler

  • SPECIAL 0x4 On the Frontline: Life with the Green Howards

    • July 19, 2010
    • BBC Two

    Britain's war in Afghanistan has cost more than 300 soldiers' lives and billions of pounds, and left thousands wounded. The effects on those who serve are profound, just as they are for the loved ones who wait at home. This programme follows A Company, 2nd Battalion the Yorkshire Regiment for a year - before, during, and after their tour in Sangin, probably the most dangerous place in Afghanistan. The result is a searing and intimate portrait of a British community at war in Afghanistan and on the home front.

  • SPECIAL 0x8 Iraq: 10 Years On

    • BBC Two

    Kirsty Wark presents a special programme with a studio audience, looking at how Iraq and the world changed following the war ten years ago.

  • SPECIAL 0x10 Brexit Britain, One Month In

    • July 23, 2016
    • BBC Two

  • SPECIAL 0x11 Trump's America: A Newsnight Special

    • November 11, 2016
    • BBC Two

    With reporting from across the United States, Newsnight explores the ramifications of the election of Donald Trump as president. Presented by Emily Maitlis.

  • SPECIAL 0x12 Expenses: The Scandal That Changed Britain

    • March 25, 2019
    • BBC Two

    Ten years on from the Parliamentary expenses scandal which rocked Westminster to the core, Newsnight's Emily Maitlis explores the profound impact it had on public trust in the political class. Taking us through every twist and turn in that dramatic period, with new revelations from the key players, this documentary also explores how the public anger surfaced by the expenses scandal anticipated the Brexit referendum and beyond.

  • SPECIAL 0x13 D-Day to Berlin: Newsnight Special

    • May 7, 1985
    • BBC Two

    George Stevens's remarkable film is acclaimed by historians as the most important colour footage taken during the war. Milestones covered include the liberation of Paris, the link-up between the Russian and American armies on the River Elbe and the Allied capture of the Dachau concentration camp.

  • SPECIAL 0x14 The Newsnight Nuclear Debate

    • September 24, 1984
    • BBC Two

    John Tusa chairs a debate on the issues raised by Threads and On the 8th Day. What are the implications of the nuclear winter for civil defence policy and nuclear strategies? Can there be a limited nuclear war? Or is the chaos caused by a first nuclear exchange so great that major escalation is inevitable? John Tusa explores these questions with politicians, defence analysts and military experts from both sides of the Atlantic.

  • SPECIAL 0x16 Kirsty Wark Meets Artist Bridget Riley

    • June 5, 2021
    • BBC Two

    Celebrated artist Bridget Riley shot to fame in the 1960s with a series of black and white geometric artworks. In an exclusive interview, she talks to Kirsty Wark about her childhood in Cornwall and the impact of war on her art, on learning from her own mistakes, and on the importance of studio space for young artists.