List of Question Time episodes
The following is a list of episodes of Question Time, a British current affairs debate television programme broadcast by BBC Television.
Contents
Year overview · Presenters · Highest appearance makers Year: 1979 · 1980 · 1981 · 1982 · 1983 · 1984 · 1985 · 1986 · 1987 · 1988 · 1989 |
Year overview
Era | Year | Episodes | Transmission dates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1970s | 1979 | 13[1][fn 1] | 25 September – 18 December | Additionally an Election Question Time aired 4 May 1979.[2] |
1980s | 1980 | 32[3] | 15 January – 18 December | |
1981 | 31[4] | 15 January – 17 December | ||
1982 | 31[5] | 14 January – 16 December | ||
1983 | 32[6][fn 2] | 13 January – 15 December | ||
1984 | 35[7] | 12 January – 20 December | ||
1985 | 29[8] | 10 January – 12 December | ||
1986 | 35[9] | 9 January – 11 December | ||
1987 | 33[10] | 15 January – 10 December | ||
1988 | 35[11] | 7 January – 15 December | ||
1989 | 37[12] | 12 January – 14 December | ||
1990s | 1990 | 34[13] | 18 January – 13 December | |
1991 | 35[14] | 10 January – 5 December | ||
1992 | 33[15] | 23 January – 10 December | ||
1993 | 34[16] | 14 January – 9 December | ||
1994 | 35[17] | 13 January – 15 December | ||
1995 | 32[18] | 12 January – 14 December | ||
1996 | 33[19] | 11 January – 19 December | ||
1997 | 33[20] | 23 January – 18 December | ||
1998 | 33[21][fn 3] | 15 January – 17 December | ||
1999 | 37[22][fn 4] | 14 January – 16 December | ||
2000s | 2000 | 36[23] | 13 January – 14 December | |
2001 | 38[24][fn 5] | 11 January – 6 December | ||
2002 | 37[25][fn 6] | 10 January −12 December | ||
2003 | 35[26] | 9 January – 11 December | ||
2004 | 37[27] | 8 January – 9 December | 25th Anniversary Special (16 September 2004). | |
2005 | 35[28] | 6 January – 8 December | ||
2006 | 36[29] | 12 January – 7 December | ||
2007 | 37[30] | 11 January – 13 December | ||
2008 | 36[31][fn 7] | 17 January – 11 December | 1000th episode (23 October 2008) | |
2009 | 37[32] | 15 January – 10 December | ||
2010s | 2010 | 40[33] | 14 January – 9 December | |
2011 | 39[34] | 13 January – 8 December | ||
2012 | 36[35] | 12 January – 13 December | ||
2013 | 38[36] | 10 January – 12 December | ||
2014 | 36[37] | 9 January – 11 December | ||
2015 | 41[38] | 8 January – 17 December | ||
2016 | 39[39] | 14 January – 8 December | ||
2017 | 41[40] | 12 January – 14 December | ||
2018 | 39[41] | 11 January – 13 December | David Dimbleby's final edition (13 December) | |
2019 | 42[42] | 10 January – 13 December | Fiona Bruce's first edition (10 January), 40th Anniversary (26 September 2019).[43] | |
2020s | 2020 | to be determined | 9 January – to be determined | |
Presenters
Presenters | Date | No. of episodes |
---|---|---|
Robin Day | 1979–1989 | 303 |
Robert McKenzie | 1980–1981 | 3 |
Ludovic Kennedy | 1982–1983 | 4 |
Bernard Levin | 1984–1985 | 2 |
Sue Lawley | 1984–1987 | 5 |
Donald MacCormick | 1985 | 9 |
Peter Sissons | 1989–1993 | 149 |
David Dimbleby | 1994–2018 | 914 |
John Humphrys | 2009 | 1 |
Nick Robinson | 2017 | 1 |
Fiona Bruce | 2019– | |
Highest appearance makers
Panellists | Affiliation | No. of appearances[44] | Average per year | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Kenneth Clarke | Conservatives | 59 | 1.6 | 1982–2019 |
Shirley Williams | Labour (before 1981) Social Democrats (1981–88) Liberal Democrats (1988–present) |
58 | 1.6 | 1980–2015 |
Menzies Campbell | Liberal Democrats | 47 | 1.6 | 1987–2017 |
Harriet Harman | Labour | 45 | 1.3 | 1981–2015 |
Charles Kennedy | Liberal Democrats | 44 | 1.4 | 1983–2015 |
Clare Short | Labour | 38 | 1.2 | 1980–2011 |
Paddy Ashdown | Liberal Democrats | 36 | 1.1 | 1983–2016 |
Roy Hattersley | Labour | 1.2 | 1979–2010 | |
Nigel Farage | Conservatives (until 1992) UKIP (1993-2018) Brexit Party (2019–present) |
35 | 1.8 | 2000–2019 |
1970s
1979
# | No. in year | Airdate | Location | Panellists | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
— | — | 4 May 1979 | Robin Day, Robert McKenzie, David Butler | Election Question Time | |
1 | 1 | 25 September 1979 | Greenwood Theatre, South London | Michael Foot, Teddy Taylor, Edna O'Brien, Derek Worlock | |
2 | 2 | 2 October 1979 | Greenwood Theatre, South London | Tess Gill, Jo Grimond, Eric Morley, Peter Shore | |
3 | 3 | 9 October 1979 | Greenwood Theatre, South London | Sue Arnold, Michael Heseltine, William Rodgers, Arthur Scargill | |
4 | 4 | 16 October 1979 | Greenwood Theatre, South London | James Anderton, Judith Hart, John Mortimer, Enoch Powell | |
5 | 5 | 23 October 1979 | Greenwood Theatre, South London | Anthony Frodsham, Clive Jenkins, Margo MacDonald, Nicholas Scott | |
6 | 6 | 30 October 1979 | Greenwood Theatre, South London | Roy Hattersley, Elspeth Howe, Emily Macfarquhar, Ray Whitney | |
7 | 7 | 6 November 1979 | Greenwood Theatre, South London | Julian Amery, Paul Johnson, Wendy Mantle, Sid Weighell | |
8 | 8 | 13 November 1979 | Greenwood Theatre, South London | Clement Freud, Ann Leslie, David Owen, Peter Thorneycroft | |
9 | 9 | 20 November 1979 | Greenwood Theatre, South London | Rachel Billington, Barbara Castle, Monty Finniston, William Waldegrave | |
10 | 10 | 27 November 1979 | Greenwood Theatre, South London | Janet Fookes, Robert Kilroy-Silk, William Rees-Mogg, Barbara Wootton | |
11 | 11 | 4 December 1979 | Greenwood Theatre, South London | Eldon Griffiths, Conor Cruise O'Brien, Gaia Servadio, Eric Varley | |
12 | 12 | 11 December 1979 | Greenwood Theatre, South London | George Brown, Clare Francis, Joan Lester, Christopher Mayhew | |
13 | 13 | 18 December 1979 | Greenwood Theatre, South London | Neil Kinnock, Bel Mooney, Chris Patten, John Rae |
1980s
1980
# | No. in year | Airdate | Location | Panellists | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
14 | 1 | 15 January 1980 | Tony Benn, Germaine Greer, John Hackett, Norman St. John Stevas | ||
15 | 2 | 22 January 1980 | Tessa Jowell, William Rees-Mogg, William Waldegrave, Barbara Wootton | ||
16 | 3 | 29 January 1980 | Noel Annan, Kenneth Baker, Denis Healey, Sara Morrison | ||
17 | 4 | 5 February 1980 | Edward du Cann, Monty Finniston, Suzanne Lowry, Oonagh McDonald | ||
18 | 5 | 12 February 1980 | Alun Chalfont, Nigel Lawson, Merlyn Rees, Marina Warner | ||
19 | 6 | 21 February 1980 | David Basnett, Barbara Castle, Detta O'Cathain, Peter Tapsell | ||
20 | 7 | 28 February 1980 | Anna Coote, Janet Fookes, Gerald Kaufman, Cyril Smith | ||
21 | 8 | 6 March 1980 | Eric Heffer, Mary Kenny, David Marquand, Geoffrey Rippon | ||
22 | 9 | 13 March 1980 | Rhodes Boyson, Austin Mitchell, Alfred Robens, Clare Short | Presenter: Robert McKenzie[45] | |
23 | 10 | 20 March 1980 | John Gale, Jill Knight, Michael Meacher, Donald Stokes | Presenter: Robert McKenzie[46] | |
24 | 11 | 27 March 1980 | Joel Barnett, John Biffen, Alan Fisher, Sarah Hogg | ||
25 | 12 | 3 April 1980 | Bonnie Angelo, Julian Critchley, Lena Jeger, Trevor Phillips | ||
26 | 13 | 10 April 1980 | Jock Bruce-Gardyne, Ray Buckton, Margaret Maden, John Methuen | ||
27 | 14 | 17 April 1980 | Elisabeth Hoodless, R.V. Jones, Sheila Roberts, John Silkin | ||
28 | 15 | 24 April 1980 | Liliana Archibald, Tessa Blackstone, Nicholas Fairbairn, Dickson Mabon | ||
29 | 16 | 1 May 1980 | Joe Ashton, John Biggs-Davison, Emma Nicholson, Ivor Richard | ||
30 | 17 | 8 May 1980 | Alan Beith, John Grugeon, Stanley Orme, Claire Palley | ||
31 | 18 | 15 May 1980 | Hugh Clegg, Reg Prentice, Jo Richardson, Angela Rumbold | ||
32 | 19 | 22 May 1980 | Leon Brittan, Paul Foot, Walter Goldsmith, Shirley Williams | ||
33 | 20 | 29 May 1980 | Patricia Hewitt, Robert Mellish, Timothy Raison, David Sheppard | ||
34 | 21 | 5 June 1980 | Patrick Devlin, Patricia Hollis, Harold Lever, Janet Young | ||
35 | 22 | 12 June 1980 | Ann Clwyd, James Goldsmith, Sally Oppenheim-Barnes, Bill Sirs | ||
36 | 23 | 16 October 1980 | David Basnett, Patricia Hewitt, Daphne Park, James Prior | ||
37 | 24 | 23 October 1980 | Roy Hattersley, Una Kroll, Nigel Lawson, Arnold Weinstock | ||
38 | 25 | 30 October 1980 | Denis Healey, Mary Kaldor, Conor Cruise O'Brien, Peter Thorneycroft | ||
39 | 26 | 6 November 1980 | Mary Baker, Leonard Downie, Francis Pym, Peter Shore | ||
40 | 27 | 13 November 1980 | Liliana Brisby, Eric Heffer, Ann Leslie, Norman St. John Stevas | ||
41 | 28 | 20 November 1980 | Michael Carver, Judith Hart, Gavin Laird, Angus Maude | ||
42 | 29 | 27 November 1980 | John Alderson, Dianne Hayter, Roy Shaw, Teddy Taylor | ||
43 | 30 | 4 December 1980 | Tessa Blackstone, Lynda Chalker, Joe Gormley, John Harvey-Jones | ||
44 | 31 | 11 December 1980 | David Howell, Peter Jay, Neil Kinnock, Gillian Peele | ||
45 | 32 | 18 December 1980 | Stanley Booth-Clibborn, Edward du Cann, Antonia Fraser, Shirley Williams |
1981
# | No. in year | Airdate | Location | Panellists | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
46 | 1 | 15 January 1981 | Barbara Castle, Peter Parker, Cyril Smith, William Whitelaw | ||
47 | 2 | 22 January 1981 | Terence Beckett, Tom Jackson, Sally Oppenheim-Barnes, John Silkin | ||
48 | 3 | 29 January 1981 | Frances Morrell, David Owen, David Steel, Peter Walker | ||
49 | 4 | 5 February 1981 | Gwyneth Dunwoody, Eldon Griffiths, Clive Jenkins, David Napley | ||
50 | 5 | 12 February 1981 | Greenwood Theatre, South London | Edward Daly, Edna Healey, Max Beloff, Norman St John-Stevas | |
51 | 6 | 26 February 1981 | Rhodes Boyson, Donald Dewar, Alex Jarratt, Nancy Seear | ||
52 | 7 | 5 March 1981 | Monty Finniston, Barney Hayhoe, Terry Marsland, Jack Straw | ||
53 | 8 | 12 March 1981 | Geoffrey Howe, Detta O'Cathain, Stanley Orme, David Penhaligon | ||
54 | 9 | 19 March 1981 | Peggy Fenner, Merlyn Rees, William Rees-Mogg, Arthur Scargill | ||
55 | 10 | 26 March 1981 | Nicky Harrison, Douglas Hurd, Gerald Kaufman, Dick Taverne | ||
56 | 11 | 2 April 1981 | Moss Evans, Jo Grimond, Susan Masham, Norman Tebbit | Presenter: Robert McKenzie[47] | |
57 | 12 | 9 April 1981 | Nigel Broackes, Harriet Harman, Roy Hattersley, Michael Heseltine | ||
58 | 13 | 16 April 1981 | Terry Duffy, Sarah Hogg, Paul Johnson, Hugh Montefiore | ||
59 | 14 | 23 April 1981 | Janey Buchan, John Pardoe, Leo Pliatzky, Geoffrey Rippon | ||
60 | 15 | 30 April 1981 | Nicholas Fairbairn, Roy Jenkins, Bel Mooney, Peter Shore | ||
61 | 16 | 7 May 1981 | Ralf Dahrendorf, Ken Gill, Helene Hayman, Peter Thorneycroft | ||
62 | 17 | 14 May 1981 | Nicholas Goodison, Ian Mikardo, Jane Reed, George Younger | ||
63 | 18 | 21 May 1981 | Frank Field, Grey Gowrie, Miriam Karlin, Sara Morrison | ||
64 | 19 | 28 May 1981 | Leon Brittan, Eric Heffer, Mary Holland, Enoch Powell | ||
65 | 20 | 4 June 1981 | Lynda Chalker, Paul Foot, Denis Healey, Peter Hill-Norton | ||
66 | 21 | 11 June 1981 | David Evans, Neil Kinnock, Usha Prashar, Timothy Raison | ||
67 | 22 | 18 June 1981 | David Howell, Michael Meacher, Janet Morgan, Woodrow Wyatt | ||
68 | 23 | 22 October 1981 | Leon Brittan, Kay Carmichael, Jo Grimond, Denis Healey | ||
69 | 24 | 29 October 1981 | Judith Hart, Douglas Hurd, Ann Leslie, William Rodgers | ||
70 | 25 | 5 November 1981 | Roy Hattersley, Nigel Lawson, Alan Sapper, Elizabeth Sidney | ||
71 | 26 | 12 November 1981 | Robin Cook, Ian Gilmore, Detta O'Cathain, Jane Reed | ||
72 | 27 | 19 November 1981 | Paul Boateng, Ronald Dworkin, Anne Jones, William Whitelaw | ||
73 | 28 | 26 November 1981 | Liverpool, England | Jock Bruce-Gardyne, Eric Heffer, Roy Jenkins, Clare Short | |
74 | 29 | 3 December 1981 | Naomi McIntosh, Sally Oppenheim-Barnes, Adam Thomson, George Wright | ||
75 | 30 | 10 December 1981 | Gerry Fitt, Joan Lestor, Emily Macfarquhar, Francis Pym | ||
76 | 31 | 17 December 1981 | Edward du Cann, Antonia Fraser, Harold Lever, Bernard Levin |
1982
# | No. in year | Airdate | Location | Panellists | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
77 | 1 | 14 January 1982 | Neil Kinnock, Marion Roe, John Thorn, Shirley Williams | ||
78 | 2 | 21 January 1982 | Terence Duffy, Tess Gill, Patrick Jenkin, Margaret Shaw | ||
79 | 3 | 28 January 1982 | Gerald Kaufman, Geoffrey Rippon, Barbara Switzer, Julie Tallon | ||
80 | 4 | 4 February 1982 | Alec Kitson, Isobel Lindsay, David Penhaligon, Malcolm Rifkind | ||
81 | 5 | 11 February 1982 | Joe Haines, Frances Morrell, Cyril Smith, Janet Young | ||
82 | 6 | 18 February 1982 | Oonagh McDonald, David Owen, Norman Tebbit, Sidney Weighell | ||
83 | 7 | 25 February 1982 | David Aaronovitch, Christopher Chataway, Brenda Dean, William Waldegrave | ||
84 | 8 | 4 March 1982 | Bonnie Angelo, Anna Coote, Grey Gowrie, Peter Shore | ||
85 | 9 | 11 March 1982 | Sarah Hogg, Geoffrey Howe, John Silkin, David Steel | ||
86 | 10 | 18 March 1982 | Norman Fowler, Ken Livingstone, Becky Tinsley, Barbara Wootton | ||
87 | 11 | 25 March 1982 | John Alderson, Alan Clark, Sheila Rothwell, Arthur Scargill | ||
88 | 12 | 1 April 1982 | Terry Marsland, John Smith, Norman St. John-Stevas, Mike Thomas | ||
89 | 13 | 8 April 1982 | Alun Chalfont, Judith Hart, David Howell, David Owen | ||
90 | 14 | 15 April 1982 | Denis Healey, Russell Johnston, Geoffrey Rippon, Peregrine Worsthorne | ||
91 | 15 | 22 April 1982 | John Hackett, Douglas Hurd, Drew Middleton, Edward Shackleton | ||
92 | 16 | 29 April 1982 | Belfast, Northern Ireland | Peter Jenkins, Inez McCormack, James Prior, Merlyn Rees | |
93 | 17 | 6 May 1982 | Betty Boothroyd, Winston Churchill, Bruce Kent, Christopher Mayhew | ||
94 | 18 | 13 May 1982 | David Blunkett, Kenneth Clarke, Conor Cruise O'Brien, Polly Toynbee | ||
95 | 19 | 20 May 1982 | John Harvey-Jones, Brenda Maddox, Cecil Parkinson, Peter Shore | Presenter: Ludovic Kennedy[48] | |
96 | 20 | 27 May 1982 | Janey Buchan, Edward du Cann, Peter Jay, Sue Slipman | Presenter: Ludovic Kennedy[49] | |
97 | 21 | 3 June 1982 | Kina Avebury, Enoch Powell, Ivor Richard, Norman St. John-Stevas | Presenter: Ludovic Kennedy[50] | |
98 | 22 | 10 June 1982 | John Hackett, Joan Lestor, John Mortimer, Angela Rumbold | ||
99 | 23 | 17 June 1982 | Tony Benn, Michael Heseltine, Patricia Mann, David Steel | ||
100 | 24 | 28 October 1982 | Norman Fowler, Neil Kinnock, Julia Neuberger, Marjorie Proops | ||
101 | 25 | 4 November 1982 | Antonia Fraser, Denis Healey, Roy Jenkins, William Whitelaw | ||
102 | 26 | 11 November 1982 | Cardiff, Wales | Leon Brittan, Gwyneth Dunwoody, Ann Leslie, Dafydd Wigley | |
103 | 27 | 18 November 1982 | Roy Evans, Harriet Harman, Sally Oppenheim-Barnes, Clive Thornton | ||
104 | 28 | 25 November 1982 | Alan Beith, Rhodes Boyson, Asa Briggs, Ann Taylor | ||
105 | 29 | 2 December 1982 | Peter Hain, Tom King, Bernard Levin, Margaret Wingfield | ||
106 | 30 | 9 December 1982 | Julian Critchley, Detta O'Cathain, Joan Ruddock, Eric Varley | ||
107 | 31 | 16 December 1982 | Claire Brooks, Patrick Meaney, Peter Shore, Peter Walker |
1983
# | No. in year | Airdate | Location | Panellists | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
108 | 1 | 13 January 1983 | Monty Finniston, Rosalind Gilmore, Nigel Lawson, Arthur Scargill | ||
109 | 2 | 20 January 1983 | Newcastle, England | Jack Cunningham, Peter Jenkins, Geoffrey Rippon, William Rodgers | |
110 | 3 | 27 January 1983 | Neil Cameron, Patricia Hewitt, Francis Pym, David Sheppard | ||
111 | 4 | 3 February 1983 | Lynda Chalker, Winnie Ewing, Clive Sinclair, George Wright | ||
112 | 5 | 10 February 1983 | John Gummer, Anne Jones, Paul Oestreicher, John Smith | ||
113 | 6 | 17 February 1983 | Barbara Castle, Kenneth Clarke, Rosalyn Higgins, Richard Holme | ||
114 | 7 | 24 February 1983 | Edward Gardner, Ken Livingstone, A. J. P. Taylor, Polly Toynbee | ||
115 | 8 | 3 March 1983 | Jean Barker, Brian Glover, Tessa Jowell, Michael Mander | ||
116 | 9 | 10 March 1983 | Edwina Currie, Neil Stewart, John Thorn, Des Wilson | Presenter: Ludovic Kennedy[51] | |
117 | 10 | 17 March 1983 | Geoffrey Howe, Gerald Kaufman, Patricia Mann, Shirley Williams | ||
118 | 11 | 24 March 1983 | Donald Dewar, Mary Kenny, Dick Taverne, George Young | ||
119 | 12 | 31 March 1983 | Grey Gowrie, Kate Hoey, William McCarthy, Madsen Pirie | ||
120 | 13 | 7 April 1983 | Noel Annan, Helen Liddell, Geoffrey Pattie, Cyril Smith | ||
121 | 14 | 14 April 1983 | David Blunkett, Edward du Cann, Andrew Knight, Sue Slipman | ||
122 | 15 | 21 April 1983 | Jill Craigie, Patrick Mayhew, Beryl Platt, Russell Profitt | ||
123 | 16 | 28 April 1983 | Neil McIntosh, Jim Mortimer, Anne Robinson, Norman Tebbit | ||
124 | 17 | 5 May 1983 | Michael Foot, Michael Heseltine, Ann Leslie, David Steel | ||
125 | 18 | 12 May 1983 | David Basnett, Leo Pliatzky, Nicholas Ridley, Elizabeth Sidney | ||
126 | 19 | 19 May 1983 [fn 8] | Roy Hattersley, David Owen, Francis Pym | ||
127 | 20 | 26 May 1983 | Manchester, England | Tony Benn, Geoffrey Howe, David Penhaligon | |
128 | 21 | 2 June 1983 | Birmingham, England | Denis Healey, Cecil Parkinson, William Rodgers | |
129 | 22 | 16 June 1983 | Tony Benn, Michael Meadowcroft, Donald Trelford, William Whitelaw | ||
130 | 23 | 23 June 1983 | Gwyneth Dunwoody, David Owen, Norman Tebbit, Clive Thornton | ||
131 | 24 | 30 June 1983 | Cambridge, England | Enoch Powell, Clare Short, Norman St. John-Stevas, George Thomas | |
132 | 25 | 27 October 1983 | Claire Brooks, John Gummer, Nicholas Henderson, Ken Livingstone | ||
133 | 26 | 3 November 1983 | Robin Cook, Rosalind Gilmore, Emily Macfarquhar, Nicholas Ridley | ||
134 | 27 | 10 November 1983 | Norman Fowler, Roy Hattersley, Wendy Hogg, Shirley Williams | ||
135 | 28 | 17 November 1983 | Paddy Ashdown, Ann Clwyd, Bernard Levin, George Walden | ||
136 | 29 | 24 November 1983 | Ian Gow, John Pardoe, Diana Rookledge, John Smith | ||
137 | 30 | 1 December 1983 | John Harvey-Jones, Douglas Hurd, Jonathon Porritt, Barbara Switzer | ||
138 | 31 | 8 December 1983 | Charles Kennedy, Gavin Laird, Clive Sinclair, George Younger | ||
139 | 32 | 15 December 1983 | David Alton, John Hackett, Oonagh McDonald, James Prior |
1984
# | No. in year | Airdate | Location | Panellists | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
140 | 1 | 12 January 1984 | Jo Foley, Tom King, Michael Meacher, Clive Thornton | ||
141 | 2 | 19 January 1984 | Denis Healey, John Hoskyns, Francis Pym, Des Wilson | ||
142 | 3 | 26 January 1984 | Noel Annan, Tony Banks, Edwina Currie, Ruth Levitt | ||
143 | 4 | 2 February 1984 | Nottingham, England | Myra Blyth, Rhodes Boyson, Anthony Sampson, Jack Straw | |
144 | 5 | 9 February 1984 | Lesley Abdela, Jack Cunningham, Jenny Kirkpatrick, Peter Walker | ||
145 | 6 | 16 February 1984 | Kenneth Baker, Len Murray, David Penhaligon, Elizabeth Rees | ||
146 | 7 | 23 February 1984 | Margaret Beckett, Leon Brittan, Roy Jenkins, Peter Timms | ||
147 | 8 | 1 March 1984 | Ann Burdus, Eric Heffer, Simon Hughes, Janet Young | ||
148 | 9 | 8 March 1984 | Lalage Bown, Edward du Cann, Austin Mitchell, Donald Stewart | ||
149 | 10 | 15 March 1984 | Sheffield, England | Kenneth Clarke, Rosalind Gilmore, Peter Shore, David Steel | |
150 | 11 | 22 March 1984 | Rodney Bickerstaffe, Cecil Parkinson, Margaret Sharp, Adam Thompson | ||
151 | 12 | 29 March 1984 | David Blunkett, Patrick Jenkin, Madsen Pirie, Nancy Seear | ||
152 | 13 | 5 April 1984 | Grey Gowrie, Peter Hall, Joan Lestor, Diana Warwick | Presenter: Bernard Levin[52] | |
153 | 14 | 12 April 1984 | Alan Clark, Jane Reed, Muriel Turner, Paul Tyler | Presenter: Sue Lawley[53] | |
154 | 15 | 19 April 1984 | James Anderton, Bryan Gould, Anne Sofer, Norman St. John-Stevas | ||
155 | 16 | 26 April 1984 | John Cartwright, Lynda Chalker, Alistair Graham, Joan Ruddock | ||
156 | 17 | 3 May 1984 | Gerald Kaufman, Nigel Lawson, Brenda Maddox, David Owen | ||
157 | 18 | 10 May 1984 | Susan Crosland, Derek Ezra, David Howell, Chris Mullin | ||
158 | 19 | 17 May 1984 | Harriet Harman, Malcolm Rifkind, Susan Thomas, Donald Trelford | ||
159 | 20 | 24 May 1984 | Roy Close, Margaret Hodge, Polly Toynbee, George Young | ||
160 | 21 | 31 May 1984 | Maggie Clay, James Eberle, Norman Lamont, George Robertson | ||
161 | 22 | 7 June 1984 | Brussels, Belgium | Edward Heath, Christine Ockrent, Roy Jenkins, Robin Cook | |
162 | 23 | 14 June 1984 | Tony Benn, Grey Gowrie, Detta O'Cathain, Donny O'Rourke | ||
163 | 24 | 21 June 1984 | Antonia Fraser, Michael Meadowcroft, John Smith, Norman Tebbit | ||
164 | 25 | 12 July 1984 | Kenneth Clarke, James Cooke, Ken Livingstone, Shirley Williams | ||
165 | 26 | 18 October 1984 | George Galloway, Robert Maxwell, Polly Toynbee, David Young | [54] | |
166 | 27 | 25 October 1984 | David Alton, Joan Maynard, David Mellor, Enid Ralphs | ||
167 | 28 | 1 November 1984 | Derry, Northern Ireland | Peter Archer, John Hume, Michael Mates, Enoch Powell | |
168 | 29 | 8 November 1984 | Paddy Ashdown, Roy Hattersley, Ann Leslie, Peter Walker | ||
169 | 30 | 15 November 1984 | John Banham, Derek Hatton, Emma Nicholson, Shirley Williams | ||
170 | 31 | 22 November 1984 | Barbara Castle, Douglas Hurd, Archy Kirkwood, Detta O'Cathain | ||
171 | 32 | 29 November 1984 | Lalage Bown, Max Hastings, Frank Judd, Richard Luce | ||
172 | 33 | 6 December 1984 | Leeds, England | Rodney Bickerstaffe, Claire Brooks, Kenneth Clarke, Peter Newsam | |
173 | 34 | 13 December 1984 | Jeremy Bullmore, John Moore, Jeff Rooker, Diana Warwick | ||
174 | 35 | 20 December 1984 | Tony Blair, Bernard Levin, Richard Needham, Sue Slipman |
1985
# | No. in year | Airdate | Location | Panellists | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
175 | 1 | 10 January 1985 | Ann Burdus, Denzil Davies, Malcolm Rifkind, William Rodgers | ||
176 | 2 | 17 January 1985 | Margaret Joachim, Richard Needham, Andrew Neil, Clare Short | ||
177 | 3 | 24 January 1985 | Jack Cunningham, Jo Foley, Geoffrey Howe, David Owen | ||
178 | 4 | 31 January 1985 | Gwyneth Dunwoody, John Harvey-Jones, Tony Newton, Anthony Parsons | ||
179 | 5 | 7 February 1985 | Elizabeth Cottrell, John Gunnell, Chris Patten, David Penhaligon | ||
180 | 6 | 14 February 1985 | Manchester, England | John Gummer, Dipak Nandy, George Robertson, Audrey Slaughter | |
181 | 7 | 21 February 1985 | Antonia Fraser, Michael Hancock, Tom King, Ken Livingstone | ||
182 | 8 | 28 February 1985 | Norman Lamont, Jonathon Porritt, Elizabeth Rees, Norman Willis | ||
183 | 9 | 7 March 1985 | Tony Benn, Kenneth Clarke, Anne Jones, David Steel | Presenter: Donald MacCormick[55] | |
184 | 10 | 14 March 1985 | Jeffrey Archer, Robin Cook, James Prior, Sue Slipman | Presenter: Donald MacCormick[56] | |
185 | 11 | 21 March 1985 | Leon Brittan, Rosalind Gilmore, Michael Meacher, Anne Sofer | Presenter: Donald MacCormick[57] | |
186 | 12 | 28 March 1985 | Oonagh McDonald, John Patten, Mary Warnock, Alan Watson | Presenter: Donald MacCormick[57] | |
187 | 13 | 4 April 1985 | Peter Jenkins, Jean Millar, John Prescott, Norman Tebbit | Presenter: Donald MacCormick[58] | |
188 | 14 | 18 April 1985 | Grey Gowrie, Laura Grimond, Denis Healey, Carol Smart | Presenter: Bernard Levin[59] | |
189 | 15 | 25 April 1985 | Myra Blyth, Donald Dewar, Teresa Gorman, Cecil Parkinson | Presenter: Sue Lawley[60] | |
190 | 16 | 2 May 1985 | Joel Barnett, Maggie Clay, Patrick Jenkin, Michael Montague | Presenter: Sue Lawley[61] | |
191 | 17 | 9 May 1985 | Lynda Chalker, Roy Jenkins, Jack Straw, Gordon Wilson | Presenter: Donald MacCormick[62] | |
192 | 18 | 16 May 1985 | Tony Blair, Edward du Cann, Peter Parker, Nancy Seear | Presenter: Donald MacCormick[63] | |
193 | 19 | 23 May 1985 | Gerald Kaufman, Sheila McKechnie, Ian Wrigglesworth, George Younger | Presenter: Donald MacCormick[64] | |
194 | 20 | 30 May 1985 | Margaret Beckett, Alex Carlile, Laurence Martin, George Walden | Presenter: Donald MacCormick[65] | |
195 | 21 | 6 June 1985 | David Blunkett, Norman Fowler, Christine Ockrent, Shirley Williams | ||
196 | 22 | 24 October 1985 | Ann Burdus, Roy Evans, Roy Hattersley, Douglas Hurd | ||
197 | 23 | 31 October 1985 | Frances Morrell, Chris Patten, David Penhaligon, Ruth Wishart | ||
198 | 24 | 7 November 1985 | Kenneth Baker, Michael Meacher, Nick Raynsford, Shirley Williams | ||
199 | 25 | 14 November 1985 | Alan Clark, Derek Hatton, Gavin Laird, Polly Toynbee | ||
200 | 26 | 21 November 1985 | Paddy Ashdown, Robin Cook, Robin McCartney, Malcolm Rifkind | ||
201 | 27 | 28 November 1985 | Swansea, Wales | Kenneth Clarke, Dafydd Elis-Thomas, Jean Millar, Giles Radice | |
202 | 28 | 5 December 1985 | James Prior, John Redwood, Clare Short, Sue Stapely | ||
203 | 29 | 12 December 1985 | David Astor, Angela Rumbold, Auberon Waugh, Valerie Wise |
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990s
1990
1991
1992
1993
# | No. in year | Airdate | Location | Panellists | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
446 | 1 | 14 January 1993 | London, England | Tony Blair, Virginia Bottomley, Patience Purchas, David Steel | |
447 | 2 | 21 January 1993 | Birmingham, England | David Blunkett, Jean Denton, Elaine Foster, Edward Roberts | |
448 | 3 | 28 January 1993 | London, England | Simon Jenkins, Mo Mowlam | |
449 | 4 | 4 February 1993 | London, England | Tony Benn, Jan Hall, Michael Heseltine, Ian McAllister | |
450 | 5 | 11 February 1993 | Bristol, England | Douglas Hurd, Dawn Primarolo, Hilary Williams | |
451 | 6 | 18 February 1993 | London, England | Nicholas Soames, Ken Livingstone | |
452 | 7 | 25 February 1993 | London, England | George Young, Kate Hoey | |
453 | 8 | 4 March 1993 | London, England | Brian Mawhinney, Tessa Blackstone, Charles Kennedy | |
454 | 9 | 11 March 1993 | Malcolm Rifkind, Paul Boateng | ||
455 | 10 | 18 March 1993 | Cardiff, Wales | Gordon Brown, John Harvey-Jones, David Hunt, Ieuan Wyn Jones | |
456 | 11 | 25 March 1993 | London, England | Kenneth Baker, Moira Constable, Pauline Green, David Starkey | |
457 | 12 | 1 April 1993 | London, England | Gyles Brandreth, John Eatwell, Amanda Platell | |
458 | 13 | 22 April 1993 | Manchester, England | Roy Hattersley, Edwina Currie, Kay Coleman, Peter Jonas | |
459 | 14 | 29 April 1993 | Bristol, England | Pam Charlwood, Glenys Kinnock, Emma Nicholson, Elizabeth Symons | |
460 | 15 | 6 May 1993 | Maidstone, England | Jonathan Aitken, Judi Clements, Bryan Gould, Tim Razzall | |
461 | 16 | 13 May 1993 | Leeds, England | Frank Dobson, Timothy Eggar, John Monks, Dr. Ann Robinson | |
462 | 17 | 20 May 1993 | London, England | Lynda Chalker, Alan Eastwood, Patricia Hewitt, Ray Williamson | |
463 | 18 | 27 May 1993 | London, England | Margaret Beckett, Simon Hughes, Andrew Neil, Tony Newton | |
464 | 19 | 3 June 1993 | Manchester, England | Luna Frank-Riley, Edward Heath, Martin Jacques, Gerald Kaufman | |
465 | 20 | 10 June 1993 | Glasgow, Scotland | Margaret Ewing, Ian Lang, Joyce McMillan, Jack Straw | |
466 | 21 | 17 June 1993 | London, England | Michael R. Angus, John Prescott, Norman Tebbit, Shirley Williams | |
467 | 22 | 16 September 1993 | London, England | Howard Davies, Roy Jenkins, Norman Lamont, Clare Short | |
468 | 23 | 23 September 1993 | London, England | Alan Beith, Robert Horton, Michael Howard, Mo Mowlam | |
469 | 24 | 30 September 1993 | Brighton, England | Tony Blair, John Edmonds, Liz Lynne, David Mellor | |
470 | 25 | 7 October 1993 | Blackpool, England | Menzies Campbell, Harriet Harman, Simon Jenkins, John Patten | |
471 | 26 | 14 October 1993 | Maidstone, England | Bryan Gould, Bernard Ingham, Elizabeth Symons, William Waldegrave | |
472 | 27 | 21 October 1993 | Birmingham, England | Alan Clark, Victoria Glendinning, Robert Key, Peter Mandelson | |
473 | 28 | 28 October 1993 | London, England | Peter Taylor, Charles Pollard, George Carman, Vivien Stern | |
474 | 29 | 4 November 1993 | London, England | Emeka Anyaoku, Tony Benn, Edwina Currie, Niall Ferguson | |
475 | 30 | 11 November 1993 | Leeds, England | Hilary Armstrong, Stephen Dorrell, Arthur Scargill, David Steel | |
476 | 31 | 18 November 1993 | Bristol, England | Gordon Brown, Malcolm Bruce, Norman Fowler, Christina Gorna | |
477 | 32 | 25 November 1993 | London, England | Roy Hattersley, Margaret Hodge, David Hunt, Sara Morrison | |
478 | 33 | 2 December 1993 | London, England | Michael Portillo, Robin Cook | |
479 | 34 | 9 December 1993 | London, England | Michael Heseltine, Neil Kinnock, Julia Neuberger, Michael Dobbs |
1994
# | No. in year | Airdate | Location | Panellists | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
480 | 1 | 13 January 1994 | London, England | Paddy Ashdown, Kenneth Clarke, John Prescott, Dr. Ann Robinson | |
481 | 2 | 20 January 1994 [fn 20] | Birmingham, England | Jeffrey Archer, Garret FitzGerald, Estelle Morris, David Starkey | |
482 | 3 | 27 January 1994 | Maidstone, England | Virginia Bottomley, Ian Hay Davidson, Brenda Dean, Steve Jones | |
483 | 4 | 3 February 1994 | London, England | Kamlesh Bahl, Roy Jenkins, Peter Lilley, Ken Livingstone | |
484 | 5 | 10 February 1994 | London, England | ||
485 | 6 | 17 February 1994 | London, England | Max Hastings, Michael Mansfield, John MacGregor, Mo Mowlam | |
486 | 7 | 24 February 1994 | London, England | Tony Blair, Peter Hennessy, Douglas Hogg, Ann Leslie | |
487 | 8 | 3 March 1994 | London, England | Glenda Jackson, Andrew Neil, David Steel, Nicholas Soames | |
488 | 9 | 10 March 1994 | Nottingham, England | Christina Baxter, Jack Cunningham, Paul Johnson, William Waldegrave | |
489 | 10 | 17 March 1994 | Cardiff, Wales | John Redwood, Kim Howells, Ieuan Wyn Jones, Liz Symons | [89] |
490 | 11 | 24 March 1994 | Manchester, England | Liz Lynne, John Patten, Robert Scott, Jack Straw | |
491 | 12 | 14 April 1994 | Birmingham, England | Margaret Beckett, Anne Minto, Norman Tebbit, Shirley Williams | |
492 | 13 | 21 April 1994 | London, England | David Alton, Tony Benn, Gerald Malone, Sara Morrison | |
493 | 14 | 28 April 1994 | Bristol, England | John Gummer, Harriet Harman, Charles Kennedy, Terry Waite | |
494 | 15 | 5 May 1994 | London, England | Glenys Kinnock, Simon Jenkins, Norman Lamont, Menzies Campbell | [90] |
495 | 16 | 12 May 1994[fn 21] | Edinburgh, Scotland | Menzies Campbell, Malcolm Rifkind, George Robertson, Alex Salmond | |
496 | 17 | 19 May 1994 | Norwich, England | Edwina Currie, Simon Hughes, Gerald Kaufman, Charles Powell | |
497 | 18 | 26 May 1994 | Nottingham, England | Alan Beith, Terence Conran, John MacGregor, Joyce Quin | |
498 | 19 | 2 June 1994 | London, England | Michael Heseltine, John Prescott, P. D. James, Alex Carlile | |
499 | 20 | 9 June 1994 | David Hunt, David Blunkett, Shirley Williams, Colin Blakemore | ||
500 | 21 | 16 June 1994 | London, England | Valerie Amos, Robin Cook, Tim Clement-Jones, Michael Portillo | |
501 | 22 | 15 September 1994 | London, England | Stephen Dorrell, Harriet Harman, Ian Hislop, Anne-Marie Huby | |
502 | 23 | 22 September 1994 | Leeds, England | Menzies Campbell, Robin Cook, Jean Denton, Judith Donovan | |
503 | 24 | 29 September 1994 | London, England | Roy Calne, Alan Clark, Anne Kelleher, Clare Short | |
504 | 25 | 6 October 1994 | Blackpool, England | Gordon Brown, Louise Christian, Teresa Gorman, Richard Holme | |
505 | 26 | 13 October 1994 | Bournemouth, England | Malcolm Bruce, David Hunt, Mo Mowlam, Mary Ann Sieghart | |
506 | 27 | 20 October 1994 | London, England | Fiona Gilmore, Jude Kelly, John Prescott, John Redwood | |
507 | 28 | 27 October 1994 | London, England | Margaret Beckett, Daniel Finkelstein, Gerald Malone, Denise Searle | |
508 | 29 | 3 November 1994 | Bristol, England | Frank Dobson, Roger Gale, Charles Kennedy, Cristina Odone | |
509 | 30 | 10 November 1994 | London, England | Diane Abbott, Christine Hancock, Norman Lamont, Matthew Parris | |
510 | 31 | 17 November 1994 | Janet Daley, Tony Newton, Susan Thomas, Jack Straw | ||
511 | 32 | 24 November 1994 | Dundee, Scotland | Hilary Campbell, Helen Liddell, John MacKay, Alex Salmond | |
512 | 33 | 1 December 1994 | London, England | Alex Carlile, Gill Nott, Ann Taylor, George Young | |
513 | 34 | 8 December 1994 | Belfast, Northern Ireland | Ken Maginnis, Patrick Mayhew, Ivor Richard, Bríd Rodgers | |
514 | 35 | 15 December 1994 | Oxford, England | Ruth Deech, Dawn Primarolo, Malcolm Rifkind, Francis Wheen |
1995
1996
1997
# | No. in year | Airdate | Location | Panellists | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
580 | 1 | 23 January 1997 | London, England | Carmen Callil, Frank Dobson, Charles Moore, Gillian Shephard | |
581 | 2 | 30 January 1997 | Norwich, England | Ian Lang, Robert Maclennan, Mary Ann Sieghart, Jack Straw | |
582 | 3 | 6 February 1997 | London, England | Janet Anderson, Angela Browning, Richard Littlejohn, Dafydd Wigley | |
583 | 4 | 13 February 1997 | Leeds, England | Kenneth Clarke, Robin Cook, Rosalind Gilmore, David Steel | |
584 | 5 | 20 February 1997 | London, England | Donald Dewar, Germaine Greer, Michael Howard, Roy Jenkins | |
585 | 6 | 27 February 1997 | Southampton, England | Mo Mowlam, Alex Salmond, Paul Tyler, George Young | |
586 | 7 | 6 March 1997 | London, England | Don Foster, Harriet Harman, Ian Hislop, Tony Newton | |
587 | 8 | 13 March 1997 | Birmingham, England | Tony Benn, Frederick Forsyth, Edward Heath, Liz Lynne | |
588 | 9 | 20 March 1997 | London, England | Anne McElvoy, Michael Portillo, Shirley Williams, Andrew Smith | |
589 | 10 | 3 April 1997 | Alex Salmond, Dafydd Wigley | [92] | |
590 | 11 | 10 April 1997 | London, England | Paddy Ashdown | |
591 | 12 | 17 April 1997 | London, England | John Major | |
592 | 13 | 24 April 1997 [fn 22] | London, England | Tony Blair | |
593 | 14 | 8 May 1997 | Peter Lilley, Andrew Neil, Ann Taylor, Jenny Tonge | [93] | |
594 | 15 | 15 May 1997 | Kenneth Clarke, Ruth Lea, Peter Mandelson, Shirley Williams | [94] | |
595 | 16 | 22 May 1997 | Frank Dobson, Michael Howard, Gill Nott, Polly Toynbee | [95] | |
596 | 17 | 29 May 1997 | Manchester, England | Michael Ancram, Jackie Ballard, Lynn Collins, John Prescott | |
597 | 18 | 5 June 1997 | London, England | Clive Anderson, Margaret Beckett, Julia Middleton, John Redwood | |
598 | 19 | 12 June 1997 | Newcastle, England | Teresa Gorman, Jacqui Smith, Adair Turner, Francis Wheen | |
599 | 20 | 19 June 1997 | London, England | Martin Bell, Linda Colley, Robin Cook, Tom King | |
600 | 21 | 25 September 1997 | London, England | Rosie Boycott, Charles Kennedy, Jack Straw, Ann Widdecombe | |
601 | 22 | 2 October 1997 | Southampton, England | Malcolm Bruce, Harriet Harman, Peter Lilley, Judy McKnight | |
602 | 23 | 9 October 1997 | Manchester, England | Menzies Campbell, Kay Coleman, Frank Dobson, Archie Norman | |
603 | 24 | 16 October 1997 | London, England | Norman Fowler, Ann Leslie, George Robertson, Bridget Rosewell | |
604 | 25 | 23 October 1997 | Belfast, Northern Ireland | Gerry Adams, John Dunlop, John Hume, Andrew Hunter, Paul Murphy | |
605 | 26 | 30 October 1997 | Nottingham, England | David Blunkett, Iain Duncan Smith, Sarah Ludford, Janet Paraskeva | |
606 | 27 | 6 November 1997 | London, England | Paul Foot, Cheryl Gillan, Clare Short, David Starkey | |
607 | 28 | 13 November 1997 | Leeds, England | Hugh Dykes, John Redwood, Joan Smith, Brian Wilson | |
608 | 29 | 20 November 1997 | London, England | Lisa Jardine, Peter Mandelson, John Maples, Anne Minto | |
609 | 30 | 27 November 1997 | Birmingham, England | Oona King, Julie Kirkbride, Richard Littlejohn, Lembit Opik | |
610 | 31 | 4 December 1997 | Robin Cook, Heather Rabbatts | ||
611 | 32 | 11 December 1997 | Cardiff, Wales | Michael Ancram, Ron Davies, Nigella Lawson, Dafydd Wigley | |
612 | 33 | 18 December 1997 | London, England | Germaine Greer, Michael Heseltine, Chris Smith, Shirley Williams |
1998
1999
2000s
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010s
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020s
2020
# | No. in year | Airdate | Location [129][132] |
Panellists | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1428 | 1 | 9 January 2020 | Oxford, England | Brandon Lewis, Clive Lewis, Anne McElvoy, Miatta Fahnbulleh, Max Hastings | |
1429 | 2 | 16 January 2020 | Liverpool, England | Helen Whately, Shami Chakrabarti, Alyn Smith, Madeline Grant, Laurence Fox | |
1430 | 3 | 23 January 2020 | Stoke Newington, England | Theresa Villiers, Emily Thornberry, Mike Barton, Sarah Baxter, Trevor Phillips | |
1431 | 4 | 30 January 2020 | Buxton, England | James Cleverly, Sarah Jones, Minette Batters, Sacha Lord, Geoff Norcott | Final edition broadcast while the United Kingdom is a member of the European Union. |
1432 | 5 | 6 February 2020 | Harpenden, England | Robert Buckland, Stella Creasy, Ed Davey, Rachel Shabi, Adam Pearson | |
1433 | 6 | 13 February 2020 | Dundee, Scotland | Tom Tugendhat, Ian Murray, Joanna Cherry, Alex Massie, Val McDermid | |
1434 | 7 | 20 February 2020 | Weymouth, England | George Eustice, Alison McGovern, Howard Davies, Ash Sarkar, Michael Portillo | |
1435 | 8 | 27 February 2020 | Middlesbrough, England | Nadhim Zahawi, Jon Ashworth, Alison Phillips, Ayesha Vardag, John Bird | |
1436 | 9 | 5 March 2020 | Tunbridge Wells, England | Matthew Hancock, Margaret Beckett, Layla Moran, Tim Stanley, Xander van Tullekin | |
1437 | 10 | 12 March 2020 | West Bromwich, England | Steve Barclay, Louise Haigh, Pete Wishart, John Ashton, Richard Walker | |
1438 | 11 | 19 March 2020 | Weston-super-Mare, England | Matthew Hancock, Andy Burnham, Tom Solomon, Frances O'Grady, Angela Hartnett | First edition without an audience due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Was also moved to an earlier time of 8pm.[133] |
1439 | 12 | 26 March 2020 | Shrewsbury, England | Robert Jenrick, Emily Thornberry, Humphrey Cobbold, Richard Horton | Starting from this edition, although the programme was filmed in London, it was taking pre-recorded questions from the location specified. |
1440 | 13 | 2 April 2020 | Rugby, England | Matthew Hancock, Yvette Cooper, Donna Kinnair, John Sentamu | |
1441 | 14 | 9 April 2020 | Uxbridge, England | Brandon Lewis, Rachel Reeves, Peter Openshaw, Darren McGarvey, Ruby Wax | |
1442 | 15 | 16 April 2020 | Wolverhampton, England | Robert Buckland, Lisa Nandy, Karan Bilimoria, Rachel Clarke | |
1443 | 16 | 30 April 2020 | Leeds, England | Grant Shapps, Anneliese Dodds, Jeane Freeman, Paul Nurse, George Osborne | Moved back to its normal time slot |
1444 | 17 | 7 May 2020 | Newcastle, England | George Eustice, Nick Thomas-Symonds, Afua Hirsch, Juergen Maier, Chris Hopson | |
1445 | 18 | 14 May 2020 | Oxford, England | Steve Barclay, Bridget Phillipson, Mick Cash, Devi Sridhar, Luke Johnson | |
1446 | 19 | 21 May 2020 | London, England | Chris Philp, Andy Burnham, Helle Thorning-Schmidt, Camilla Tominey, James Graham | |
1447 | 20 | 28 May 2020 | Glasgow, Scotland | Helen Whately, Ian Murray, John Swinney, Layla McCay, Alex Massie | First edition since 19 March 2020 to have an audience, albeit in a virtual format. |
1448 | 21 | 4 June 2020 | Southampton, England | Nadhim Zahawi, David Lammy, Donna Kinnair, Hugh Pennington | |
1449 | 22 | 11 June 2020 | Cardiff, Wales | Robert Buckland, Vaughan Gething, Liz Saville Roberts, Rocco Forte, Bernardine Evaristo | |
1450 | 23 | 18 June 2020 | Plymouth, England | James Cleverly, Lisa Nandy, Munira Wilson, Steve Parish, Jed Mercurio | |
1451 | 24 | 25 June 2020 | Uxbridge, England | Steve Barclay, Jess Phillips, Theo Paphitis, Iona Bain, George the Poet | Under 30s special. |
Future locations and panellists sometimes change. Updates to locations are listed on the Question Time website.[42] | |||||
Notes
- Note Genome lists 14 episodes but Election Question Time aired 4 May 1979 is not considered part of the series.
- Note Genome only lists 29 episode due to Radio Times Printing dispute.
- Note Genome only lists 32 episodes due to 16 April 1998 being unscheduled.
- Note Genome only lists 36 episodes due to 15 July 1999 being unscheduled.
- Note Genome only lists 37 episodes due to 13 September 2001 being unscheduled.
- Note Genome only lists 36 episodes due to 28 March 2002 being unscheduled.
- On BBC Genome it shows 37 episode but 1 is an alternative schedule.
- 19 May 1983: During the 1983 general election campaign Conservative Foreign Secretary Francis Pym said on Question Time that he thought landslide victories did not produce successful governments. He was later sacked by the Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.
- 22 July 1989: This was the last edition of Question Time under Robin Day's chairmanship, programme included brief highlights of the past ten years.
- 18 October 1990: This edition was originally scheduled to feature four panellists of Tony Benn, Margaret Ewing, Andrew Neil and Malcolm Rifkind. However both Tony Benn and Andrew Neil were late to arrive, so Menzies Campbell and Magnus Linklater took their place, but eventually both Benn and Neil arrived 20 minutes into the programme. Thus this was the first edition to feature six panellists.
- 22 November 1990: Broadcast on the day of Margaret Thatcher's resignation. Transmitted in two parts with two different panels.
- 17 January 1991: Special Question Time concentrating on events and questions around the Gulf War, and split into two sections, with two different panels.
- Dr Ann Robinson, head of policy unit at the Institute of Directors.
- Rhiannon Chapman, director of the Industrial Society.
- Alf Gordon, Welsh Develop Corporation.
- Esther Leneman, French radio and television journalist.
- Yvonne Barton from British Gas.
- Dr Sheila Lawlor from the Centre for Policy Studies.
- Dr Marie Stewart from a Equal Opportunities Consultant.
- 20 January 1994: This edition was notable for a confrontation between Jeffrey Archer and David Starkey over the age of homosexual consent.
- 12 May 1994: Edition following the death of Labour Party leader John Smith, which sees panellists depart from the usual political debate to pay tribute to Smith instead.
- 1997: In the build-up to the 1997 General Election, the three main party leaders answered questions from a studio audience.
- 25 February 1999: This edition concerned the findings from the Stephen Lawrence enquiry.
- 1 July 1999: The Leader of the Opposition William Hague was the sole panellist in this special Question Time programme
- 8 July 1999: Tony Blair was the sole panellist in a special Question Time programme
- 14 October 1999: Australian Republic Referendum special.
- 2 March 2000: London Mayoral Election debate
- 15 May 2001: Wales Question Time with Plaid Cymru leader Ieuan Wyn Jones. Presented by David Williams.
- 15 May 2001: Scotland Question Time with SNP leader John Swinney. Presented by Anne McKenzie.
- 30 May 2001: During the 2001 General Election campaign, the main political party leaders faced questions from a studio audience.
- 5 July 2001: 2001 Conservative Leadership special
- 13 September 2001: Filmed two days after the 11 September 2001 attacks. The BBC received more than 2,000 complaints for its strong anti-American sentiments from audience members.
- 21 February 2002: Noted for Ian Hislop's attack on Mary Archer.
- 12 September 2002: Special edition from New York, one year on from the World Trade Centre attacks.
- 20 March 2003: Broadcast on the day of the outbreak of the Iraq War .
- 24 April 2003: Special edition from Abu Dhabi which discussed the consequences of the war in Iraq .
- 29 January 2004: This edition focused on the publication of the Hutton Report.
- School's edition
- 28 October 2004: 2004 US Presidential Election special.
- 3 February 2005: This show included a successful marriage proposal from an audience member to his girlfriend, the programme's first in its 25 year history.
- 10 March 2005: This edition of Question Time was in China as part of the BBC's China Week.
- 28 April 2005: 2005 General Election special
- 26 May 2005: French EU constitution referendum special edition.
- 7 July 2005: Special edition from Johannesburg. This was broadcast on the day of 7 July 2005 attacks in London.
- 3 November 2005: 2005 Conservative Leadership special
- 9 February 2006: 2006 Liberal Democrats Leadership debate
- 30 March 2006: Special edition from Moscow in time for the G8 conference in Saint Petersburg.
- 22 March 2007: Iraq special
- 10 May 2007: This edition focused on Tony Blair's legacy after 10 years as Prime Minister.
- 14 June 2007: Labour Deputy Leadership special
- 11 October 2007: Noted for Kelvin MacKenzie's attack on Scotland. The BBC received 350 complaints and MacKenzie's comments drew widespread criticism in both Scotland and England.
- 15 November 2007: 2007 Liberal Democrats Leadership debate
- 24 April 2008: This edition featured the three main candidates in the London mayoral election race .
- 23 October 2008: This was the 1000th edition of Question Time.
- Phil Woolas was to appear on the panel but the it was feared he would be to controversial.
- 30 October 2008: 2008 US Presidential Election special.
- 26 March 2009: Noted for Eric Pickles' 'explanation' of his part in the expenses debate.
- 21 May 2009: Focussed on the MP expenses scandal. Also, this edition was broadcast at the earlier time of 9.00pm.
- 11 June 2009: Was originally supposed to take place in Llandudno and feature Dom Joly as a panellist.
- 25 June 2009: A cat was loose during the recording of this episode and is seen behind Julia Goldsworthy at various times.
- 22 October 2009: Notable due to appearance of BNP leader Nick Griffin. Worldwide press coverage, and record viewing figures – 7.9 million..
- 12 November 2009: Hosted by John Humphrys after David Dimbleby was hit by an animal on his farm.
- 4 March 2010: Episode including Carol Vorderman as one of the panelists. She was slated for her performance, which the New Statesman's James MacIntyre described as "one of the worst by any panel member I have ever seen" because of her "clichéd, shrill, pub-boring, parochial approach" and because "she trotted out sluggish conventional wisdom at every turn".
- 11 March 2010: The show's first ever women-only audience, this was to mark International Women's Day.
- 7 April 2010: Broadcast brought forward a day due to a golfing tournament.
- 15 April 2010: Held after the first election debate in Manchester, focusing on domestic policy
- 22 April 2010: Held after the second election debate in Bristol, focusing on International Affairs
- 29 April 2010: Held after the third election debate in Birmingham, focusing on the Economy and Taxes
- 13 May 2010: First Question Time following the 2010 general election and the formation of the coalition government between the Conservative Party and the Liberal Democrats.
- 27 May 2010: An appearance was expected to be made by a Liberal Democrat member of the Cabinet but would only appear under the condition Alastair Campbell was replaced by a Labour front-bencher. The BBC chose to have Campbell remain a panellist.
- 16 September 2010: Labour Leadership Special
- 30 September 2010: Sayeeda Warsi was due to appear, but Shapps took her place at the last minute.
- 19 May 2011: Episode after Ken Clarke's controversial views on rape unfolded after an interview on the radio station BBC 5 Live.
- 11 August 2011: Scheduled at the last minute following the riots in London and across England.
- 15 March 2012: Last minute replacement for Charles Kennedy who missed his train.
- 26 April 2012: This edition was originally to be a London Mayoral Election Debate, but contenders pulled out as the BNP candidate was taking part.
- 17 May 2012: Last minute replacement for Brian May who was ill.
- 31 October 2013: Journalist and presenter Paris Lees becomes the first openly transgender panellist to appear on the programme.
- 14 November 2013: The venue was changed from an episode scheduled for Brighton after BAE Systems announced the closure of shipyards in Portsmouth.
- 21 November 2013: The panel only consisted of 3 guests as Joan Bakewell and Tim Stanley were unable to make it due to transport issues.
- 5 December 2013: This episode was moved to a later time slot on BBC Two due to news coverage of the death of Nelson Mandela replacing normal BBC One programming.
- 12 December 2013: This episode was originally scheduled for Swansea, but following the death of Nelson Mandela, it was broadcast from Johannesburg to debate his legacy.
- 23 January 2014: This episode had four panelists in order to have an equal number of people who are for and against Scottish independence.
- 30 January 2014: Matthew Oakeshott was a last minute replacement for Charles Kennedy.
- 6 March 2014: Episode in which an audience member stormed out mid-show after engaging in a heated debate about immigration with panel member David Aaronovitch.
- 6 March 2014: Aleksander Nekrassov, a former Kremlin adviser, was a last minute addition to the panel because of events surrounding the 2014 Crimean crisis.
- 10 July 2014: This was the final edition of Question Time to air before the 2014 Scottish independence referendum, and the first to include no politicians among its panelists.
- 2 October 2014: Julian Huppert was a last minute replacement for Menzies Campbell, who had been scheduled to appear on the panel.
- 11 December 2014: Edition in which Russell Brand described Nigel Farage as a "pound shop Enoch Powell", a reference to the politician who made the infamous 1968 Rivers of Blood speech.
- 5 February 2015: The edition in which Galloway was asked about the rise in antisemitism in the UK, and whether he bore some responsibility for its increase. Galloway's appearance on the programme was criticised ahead of its broadcast by several individuals and groups, including Times of Israel columnist Alex Klineberg because of Galloway's outspoken views on Israel. Galloway said he was set up, and that chair David Dimbleby apologised to him privately over the tone of the question.
- 26 March 2015: This edition was broadcast live following the first TV debate between David Cameron and Ed Miliband by Sky and Channel 4 in the Battle for Number 10 debate.
- 30 April 2015: 2015 General Election Special. Aired at 8pm, rather than the usual 10:45pm.
- 8 May 2015: Post 2015 General Election Special. Aired at 8:30pm, rather than the usual 10:45pm. A UKIP representative was invited to join, but the party was unable to send one.
- 25 June 2015: Giles Fraser was a last minute replacement for Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis who was scheduled to be on the panel.
- 17 September 2015: Episode in which newly appointed Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell apologises for a 2003 speech in which he called for members of the IRA to be honoured for the bombings that brought the British government "to the negotiating table" during the peace process, and for a joke he made in 2010 about wishing he could go back in time to assassinate Margaret Thatcher.
- 15 October 2015: Edition in which audience member Michelle Dorrell berates Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change Amber Rudd about government plans to cut child tax credits for working families, highlighting concerns about the proposals and forcing the government to defend its position.
- 19 November 2015: First edition broadcast after the November 2015 Paris attacks. Was originally scheduled to be held in Belfast, with Theresa Villiers, Peter Hain and Gráinne Maguire on the panel, but was changed to London.
- 28 January 2016: This edition was dedicated to Charlie Courtauld, a former editor of the show, who had recently died.
- 4 February 2016: Paul Nuttall was a replacement for Nigel Farage who got stuck in traffic.
- 15 June 2016: Michael Gove was the sole panelist in a special edition of Question Time where he made the case for the UK to leave the EU. Was broadcast at the earlier time of 18:45.
- 19 June 2016: David Cameron was the sole panelist in a special edition of Question Time where he made the case for the UK to remain in the EU. Was broadcast at the earlier time of 18:45.
- 26 June 2016: Post-Brexit special, the panel was divided 50/50 on those who supported Brexit and those who supported Remain. Was broadcast live at the earlier time of 18:30.
- 8 September 2016: 2016 Labour Leadership special. Was broadcast at the earlier time of 21:00.
- 29 September 2016: Richard Burgon was a last minute replacement for Emily Thornberry, after the latter flew to Israel to attend the funeral of former Israeli President Shimon Peres, who had died the previous day.
- 3 November 2016: Businessman and UKIP donor Arron Banks was originally scheduled to be on the panel, but was replaced by Charlie Wolf.
- 10 November 2016: First edition broadcast after the 2016 United States presiential election. All of the questions focused on Donald Trump winning and what it would mean internationally.
- 24 November 2016: Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell was scheduled to make an appearance, but he was taken ill so he was replaced by Chris Leslie.
- 9 March 2017: Kezia Dugdale was a last minute replacement for John McDonnell, who couldn't make it due to missing a flight.
- 27 March 2017: Britain after Brexit special.
- 25 May 2017: This edition was due to be broadcast from Belfast but was moved to Salford following the Manchester Arena bombing.
- 2 June 2017: 2017 General Election Specials. Broadcast at the earlier time of 8:30pm
- 5 June 2017: Leader's Special (Election 2017) Was due to be broadcast at 5.55pm on 4 June but was postponed for a BBC News special following the 2017 London Bridge attack – the programme was moved to 9:00pm the next day. Was presented by Nick Robinson instead of David Dimbleby.
- 9 June 2017: Post 2017 General Election Special.
- 22 June 2017: Believed to be the first time a member of the audience has been told to leave the programme for repeatedly heckling the panel.
- 23 November 2017: This edition was only 40 minutes long as an audience member fell ill, and was unable to be safely recovered.
- 1 November 2018: Giles Watling was a last-minute replacement for Elizabeth Truss after her train was delayed.
- 13 December 2018:This was the last Question Time chaired by David Dimbleby.
- 10 January 2019: This was the first edition hosted by Fiona Bruce.
- 30 May 2019: While appearing on this edition, the Liberal Democrats deputy leader Jo Swinson confirms that she will put her name forward in the party's forthcoming leadership election.
- 19 November 2019: General Election special. Filmed 18 November 2019
- 22 November 2019: General Election special. Broadcast at the earlier time of 19:00
gollark: I WILL monetize communism.
gollark: Anyway, I would be excited to participate in your word market ~~and do high frequency trading~~ so notify me of progress and/or if you need help please.
gollark: ... rollbacking?
gollark: If you expect unquestioning obedience, stop doing that.
gollark: <:bees:724389994663247974> you.
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- "Election Question Time". BBC Genome. Retrieved 27 October 2017.
- "Question Time 1980". BBC Genome. Retrieved 12 November 2017.
- "Question Time 1981". BBC Genome. Retrieved 12 November 2017.
- "Question Time 1982". BBC Genome. Retrieved 28 October 2017.
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External links
- Future programmes
- Archived Radio Times listing (1979–2009)
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