Daily Mail

It’s about time a woman was hosting Question Time says culture minister

- Daily Mail Reporter

CULTURE Secretary Matt Hancock says it is ‘about time’ a woman was at the helm of Question Time.

After David Dimbleby announced he is standing down after 25 years of presenting the BBC show, Mr Hancock was asked in the Commons yesterday if he agreed his replacemen­t should be a woman.

Conservati­ve MP Vicky Ford said: ‘Will the secretary of state join me in thanking David Dimbleby for his role – 25 years at the helm of Question Time.

‘And does he agree with me that in this year – 100 years of women’s suffrage – this baton should be passed to a woman?’ Mr Hancock replied: ‘I think the whole House will want to congratula­te David Dimbleby on his achievemen­t. And while, of course, the job must go according to merit, I think it’s about time we had a woman at the helm of Question Time.’

Dimbleby, 79, first presented Question Time on January 14, 1994, and is the longest serving presenter of the show.

He has missed only one episode of the show, when he was admitted to hospital after being kicked by a cow at his Sussex home in 2009. He said earlier this week: ‘At the end of the year I will have been chairing Question Time for a quarter of a century and I have decided that this is the right moment to leave. His final broadcast will be on December 13.

Several women have been mentioned as possible replacemen­ts, including BBC journalist Samira Ahmed – who said on Twitter she was ‘very well qualified’ for the role – presenter Victoria Derbyshire, BBC Radio 5 Live’s Emma Barnett, Today presenter Mishal Husain, and the Newsnight pair of Kirsty Wark and Emily Maitlis.

Other contenders include Krishnan GuruMurthy and Nick Robinson.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom