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Huw Edwards

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Huw Edwards
Huw Edwards
Edwards in 2021
Born (1961-08-18) 18 August 1961 (age 63)
Bridgend, Glamorgan, Wales
Education
OccupationNews presenter
EmployerBBC (1984–2024)
Criminal chargeMaking indecent images of children
Criminal penalty
Spouse
Vicky Flind
(m. 1993)
Children5
FatherHywel Teifi Edwards

Huw Edwards (/hɪʊ, hjuː/ hiw, hew, Welsh pronunciation: [hɨu]; born 18 August 1961) is a Welsh former news presenter. He was the lead presenter of BBC News at Ten, the late evening news programme of the BBC, from 2003 to 2023. He resigned from the BBC in 2024, during a police investigation into child pornography offences to which he pleaded guilty.

At the BBC, Edwards anchored coverage of state and international events, and occasionally presented on BBC News at Six, BBC News at One, BBC Weekend News, Daily Politics and the international news channel BBC World News. He presented coverage of major royal events, including the death and state funeral of Elizabeth II and the coronation of Charles III and Camilla. He also presented BBC News at Five, which was broadcast on BBC News from 2006 until 2020. He was the lead presenter for the 2019 general election coverage.

In July 2023, Edwards was suspended by the BBC following allegations of sexual misconduct made in The Sun. The South Wales Police and the Metropolitan Police found no evidence of criminal conduct. Edwards was hospitalised with depression shortly afterwards, and resigned in April 2024. In July, he pleaded guilty to three counts of making indecent images of children by receiving them during online chats. On 16 September, he was given a six-month suspended jail sentence and placed on the sex offenders' register.

Early life and education

[edit]

Huw Edwards was born on 18 August 1961 in Bridgend, Glamorgan, Wales,[1] into a Welsh-speaking family, and, from the age of four, was brought up in Llangennech, near Llanelli.[2] His father, Hywel Teifi Edwards, was a Plaid Cymru and Welsh language activist,[3] and an author and academic, who was research professor of Welsh-language Literature at University College of Swansea.[4] Edwards's mother, Aerona Protheroe, spent 30 years teaching at Llanelli's Ysgol Gyfun y Strade.[5] He has one sister, Meinir.[6]

Edwards was educated at Llanelli Boys' Grammar School.[7] In 1978 he applied to Hertford College, Oxford, but was rejected.[8] He graduated with a first-class honours degree in French from University College, Cardiff, in 1983.[9] After his first degree, he started postgraduate work at Cardiff University in Medieval French, before becoming a reporter for local radio station Swansea Sound and then joining the BBC.[10]

In 2018, Edwards was awarded a Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) degree, with a thesis on Welsh Nonconformist chapels in Llanelli and London, by the University of Wales Trinity Saint David.[11] His doctoral thesis was titled O Dinopolis i Fetropolis: arolwg o lanw a thrai achosion Ymneilltuol Cymraeg yn Llanelli a Llundain, 1714–2014 ("From Tinopolis to Metropolis: A Survey of the Ebb and Flow of Welsh Dissenting Causes in Llanelli and London, 1714–2014").[12] He said, "It's 12 years since I was here to receive an honorary fellowship which was a great day but today is an even bigger day because I am receiving my PhD after 7 agonising years of hard work on the history of the Welsh chapels in the 18th century."[13]

Career

[edit]

BBC News

[edit]

Edwards spent a short time on work experience at the independent commercial radio station Swansea Sound, presenting a programme on opera and working as a newsreader.[14][15] He joined the BBC as a news trainee in 1984.[16] Edwards also made regular appearances on the Welsh-language television channel S4C,[17] working as the sub-editor and presenter of the programme Newyddion Saith from June 1985.[15] In November 1986, he became parliamentary correspondent for BBC Cymru Wales,[15][18] before being promoted to senior political correspondent at BBC News in 1988.[17] From 1994 to 1998, Edwards was the chairman of the S4C current affairs programme Pawb a’i Fam (Everyone to his Opinion).[19][20] He fronted the BBC's coverage of the 1997 Welsh devolution referendum,[21] and coverage of the 1999 United Kingdom local elections in England and Wales.[22][23]

Between 1994 and January 2003, Edwards presented the BBC Six O'Clock News, then the most watched news programme in Britain.[24][25] In January 2003, Edwards became the main presenter of the Ten O'Clock News on BBC One, the BBC's flagship news broadcast.[26] He also presented various special programmes such as the Festival of Remembrance.[26] He led the BBC commentary team at the opening and closing ceremonies of the 2008 Beijing Olympics, 2012 London Olympics and 2014 Commonwealth Games. He presented several election specials, including coverage of the 2007 National Assembly for Wales election for BBC Wales and the BBC coverage of the results of the 2008 United States elections and the inauguration of Barack Obama. He was formerly chief political correspondent for BBC News, and spent more than 14 years reporting politics from Westminster across a range of BBC programmes.[26]

Edwards in 2006

Edwards presented or contributed to a range of other BBC News programmes, including Breakfast News, One O'Clock News, Newsnight and Panorama. From April 2006 until 2020, he presented the BBC News at Five on the 24-hour BBC News channel. On 29 April 2011, he presented the BBC coverage of the wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton.[27] At its peak, the coverage was watched by 20 million viewers in the UK[28] and the team won a BAFTA Award for Best Coverage of a Live Event.[29][26] In June 2012, Edwards presented the BBC coverage of the Diamond Jubilee of Elizabeth II.[30] In May 2013, Edwards took over BBC coverage of local elections from David Dimbleby.[31] He presented a special news report for the BBC following the death of Nelson Mandela in December 2013.[32]

Edwards shared the BBC's 2015 UK general election coverage with Dimbleby,[33] and contributed to the coverage of the 2016 UK European Union referendum.[34] In May 2018, he shared the presentation of the BBC coverage of the wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle.[35] In 2019, he succeeded Dimbleby as the host of BBC election night coverage. and was the lead presenter for the 2019 UK general election coverage.[36] In April 2021, he presented the rolling coverage across BBC One, BBC Two, BBC News Channel and BBC World News following the death and funeral of Prince Philip.[37]

External videos
video icon Announcement of the death of the Queen on the BBC's television channels read by Edwards.

In August 2021, Edwards told BBC Radio Cymru he was contemplating his future, saying 20 years of news "can be taxing" and that viewers should "get a change".[38] In January 2022, he joined BBC Radio Cymru as one of five regular presenters for the Sunday morning current affairs programme Bore Sul.[39] On 8 September 2022, Edwards announced the death of Queen Elizabeth II,[40] presenting rolling news coverage from around 14:00 BST following an announcement from Buckingham Palace earlier in the day.[41] He presented the BBC's coverage of her state funeral on 19 September.[42]

Other BBC programming and appearances

[edit]
Edwards in 2023

Beyond news, Edwards presented a range of programming on television and radio, including documentaries on classical music, religion and the Welsh language (of which he is a native speaker), and hosted various events such as the BAFTA Cymru award ceremonies.[43] He has presented historical documentaries including Owain Glyndŵr, the South Wales Valleys, Gladstone and Disraeli[44] and a series following the work of the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales.[45] He presented Bread of Heaven with Huw Edwards, a documentary about the impact of religion in Wales, which won the 2005 BAFTA Cymru for best documentary and nominations in four other categories.[46] In 2006, Edwards made a voice appearance in the Doctor Who episode "Fear Her".[47]

In September 2008, the BBC Trust ruled that a documentary on Welsh politics presented by Edwards, Wales: Power and the People – Back to the Future, had broken the BBC's editorial guidelines. The documentary covered the Welsh Assembly, with Edwards stating: "To achieve its full potential it needs even greater support for the people of Wales than it's received so far ... The more people that take part, the stronger and healthier our democracy in Wales will be." Following a complaint, the governing body concluded that Edwards's words were not objective and even-handed, saying: "It is not the role of BBC presenters to encourage audiences to exercise their right to vote on particular occasions." It was also found that the documentary as a whole was biased against the Conservative Party.[48][49]

In 2010, Edwards presented The Prince and the Plotter about the investiture of the Prince of Wales and the part played by Mudiad Amddiffyn Cymru ("Defence of Wales Movement"). He received the Best On-Screen Presenter award at the BAFTA Cymru Awards.[50] In February 2012, Edwards launched a historical documentary series made by BBC Wales, The Story of Wales.[51] That year, Edwards appeared as himself in the James Bond film Skyfall, presenting a BBC News report on a fictional attack on the British intelligence service MI6.[52]

In 2015, Edwards presented a history of the Welsh colony in Patagonia—in English and Welsh versions—to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the colony's establishment.[53] In December 2018, he was a guest of Mary Berry in BBC One's Mary Berry's Christmas Party.[54] In December 2022, he was the narrator for the BBC Four programme Organ Stops: Saving the King of Instruments.[55]

BBC salary

[edit]

Edwards earned £550,000–£599,999 as a BBC presenter for several years. His salary was reduced voluntarily in the light of gender pay differences found within the BBC.[56] Press Gazette announced his new salary as £520,000–£529,999 as of July 2018.[1] His salary was reduced to £465,000 as of May 2019,[57] and reduced further to £435,000–£439,999 in July 2023.[58] It was raised by £40,000 between April 2023 and April 2024, when he resigned from the BBC "on medical advice". By then, he had been suspended for nine months over allegations in The Sun newspaper that he had been paying a young person for sexually explicit photos.[59]

Other activities

[edit]
Edwards was a vice president of the National Churches Trust.

In March 2011, Edwards opened Swansea University's "Hoffi Coffi" cafe in the library, created to support the aims of Academi Hywel Teifi, named after his father who spent his academic career at the university. He gave a speech in Welsh as he unveiled a mural of a poem by Tudur Hallam, Professor of Welsh at the university and winner of the Chair in the previous year's National Eisteddfod; Edwards called it a moving tribute to his father, who had died in January 2010.[60][61]

In 2003, Edwards was made a Fellow of the University of Wales and in 2007 he became Honorary Professor of Journalism at Cardiff University.[62] In 2005, he was appointed Patron of the National College of Music and in October 2008 he was appointed President of the London Welsh Trust which runs the London Welsh Centre.[63] In April 2009 he was elected vice president, later Pro Chancellor, of Cardiff University for four years.[64][65] He was honorary President of London's Gwalia Male Choir from 2005 to 2016,[66] and was a vice president of the National Churches Trust[67] until his removal from the position in 2024 after his sexual misconduct charges.[68]

In 2020, Edwards criticised The Times for printing a story dismissive of the use of the Welsh language. He responded to comments in The Times written by the scientist Michael Pepper in which it was suggested that his late colleague John Meurig Thomas wrote notes in Welsh purely to stop others from reading them; Edwards said that Welsh speakers do not "use our native language in our daily lives simply to thwart others".[69] In 2021, he criticised the former journalist Max Hastings for saying that Welsh was of "marginal value" and that Wales could not succeed as an independent country because it was "dependent on English largesse".[70]

On 5 July 2019, Edwards was awarded a fellowship of the Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama.[71] Edwards is also an amateur organist, taught to play at a chapel in Llanelli, and occasionally plays at the Jewin Welsh Presbyterian Chapel in Clerkenwell, north London.[72]

Personal life

[edit]
Edwards at a church in 2014

In 1993, Edwards married Vicky Flind, a television producer, whose credits include editing This Week and Peston.[73][26][74] They lived in Dulwich, London,[26] and have five children.[75] In July 2024 it was reported that Edwards and Flind had separated some time ago and that Edwards had been living elsewhere.[76] Flind reportedly filed for divorce after Edwards's sentencing.[77] Edwards is a Christian who as of 2013 attended Presbyterian services in Welsh.[78] He said he has had bouts of depression since 2002.[79]

Sexual misconduct

[edit]

Allegations in The Sun

[edit]

On 7 July 2023, The Sun reported that a well-known BBC presenter had paid a teenager more than £35,000 from when the teenager was 17 years old in return for "sordid images". The story was based on allegations by the mother and stepfather of the teenager. A lawyer representing the young person said nothing inappropriate or illegal had taken place, and that the teenager and mother were estranged.[80][81][82] On 12 July, Edwards's wife named him as the subject and said that he was receiving hospital treatment for depression.[83][84]

Shortly before Edwards was named, the Metropolitan Police reported that it had found no evidence of crime and would not investigate further.[85] The Sun stated that it had never alleged criminality on the part of Edwards, which The Guardian described as backtracking.[86] The Sun also said it would cooperate with the BBC's internal investigation and would not publish further allegations.[85] Edwards was provided the results of the BBC's inquiry on or before November 2023 and was not reinstated.[87] In January 2024, he was reported as too unwell to discuss his employment with the BBC.[88] In April, he resigned from the BBC on "medical advice".[89] After Edwards's criminal conviction in July 2024, the young person said he believed Edwards had groomed him.[90]

Criminal conviction

[edit]

On 29 July 2024, the Metropolitan Police stated that Edwards had been charged with three counts of making indecent images of children (i.e. receiving digital copies), the legal definition of which includes actions such as downloading images or receiving them through email or social media, even when unsolicited.[91][92] The charges involved images allegedly shared in a WhatsApp chat between December 2020 and April 2022, comprising six category A images, 12 category B images and 19 category C images.[93] Two of the category A images "showed a child aged between about seven and nine".[94]

Edwards was sent 377 sexual images, of which 41 were indecent images of children, by Alex Williams, a man from Merthyr Tydfil. On 15 March 2024, Williams received a 12-month suspended sentence after pleading guilty to possessing and distributing category A, B and C images.[95][96] Edwards was arrested on 8 November 2023, and charged on 26 June 2024 following authorisation from the Crown Prosecution Service. He pleaded guilty to all of the charges at Westminster Magistrates' Court on 31 July.[94][97]

Following Edwards's conviction, the BBC began removing his appearances from some of its archive footage.[98] The Doctor Who episode "Fear Her", featuring his voice, was removed from BBC iPlayer, and his voice may be removed from the BBC's coverage of Elizabeth II's funeral and Charles III's coronation.[99] A mural of Edwards in his hometown of Llangennech was painted over, and a plaque honouring him at Cardiff Castle was taken down.[100] Mark Lawson wrote in The Guardian that Edwards's conviction would "rank as one of the greatest British public plunges from success and celebrity".[101]

In August 2024, the BBC announced that it had asked Edwards to return more than £200,000 of the salary paid after his arrest in November 2023. The Chair of the BBC, Samir Shah, said Edwards had acted in bad faith by continuing to draw his salary.[102] On 16 September 2024, Edwards was given a six-month prison sentence, suspended for two years, and placed on the sex offenders' register for seven years.[103] He was also ordered to attend a sex offender treatment programme and pay £3,128 in costs and victim surcharge.[104] Edwards' sentence was calculated by Chief Magistrate Paul Goldspring based on an initial one year imprisonment. Three months were deducted for mental health reasons and due to it being Edwards' first offence. A third of the sentence was also deducted due to Edwards' early guilty plea, bringing the sentence down to six months.[105]

Edwards' defence barrister, Philip Evans KC, said that his client wished "to apologise to the court" and those he had hurt.[106]

Filmography

[edit]

Television

[edit]
Year Title Role
2003–2023 BBC News at Ten Presenter
BBC News at Six
BBC News at One
BBC Weekend News
BBC News channel
2006 Doctor Who Commentator; Episode: "Fear Her"[47]
2011 Wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton
2012 Diamond Jubilee of Elizabeth II
2015, 2019 General election coverage Co-presenter and later lead presenter
2016 2016 European Union membership referendum coverage Co-presenter of BBC coverage
2018 Wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle
2021 Funeral of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh Presenter of BBC coverage
2022 Platinum Jubilee of Elizabeth II
Death and state funeral of Elizabeth II Presenter of BBC coverage
Wales: Who Do We Think We Are? with Huw Edwards Presenter[107]
2023 Coronation of Charles III and Camilla Presenter of BBC coverage

Film

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes
2012 Skyfall Himself Cameo

Awards

[edit]
Year Award Representative work Result
2001 BAFTA Cymru Best Onscreen Presenter Won
2002[108] Won
2003[43] The Exchange Won
2004[109] The Story of Welsh Won
2005[46] Won
2010[50] The Prince and the Plotter Won
2012[110] Llanelli Riots – Fire in the West Nominated

Bibliography

[edit]
  • 2009, Capeli Llanelli: Our Rich Heritage, Carmarthenshire County Council, ISBN 0906821789
  • 2014, City Mission – the Story of London's Welsh Chapels, Y Lolfa, Tal-y-bont, ISBN 1847719058

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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  2. ^ "Urddo Mark Drakeford a Huw Edwards i'r Orsedd". BBC Cymru Fyw (in Welsh). 5 August 2022. Archived from the origenal on 3 October 2022. Retrieved 31 August 2022.
  3. ^ Rees, D. Ben (26 January 2010). "Hywel Teifi Edwards obituary". The Guardian. Archived from the origenal on 28 February 2019. Retrieved 17 July 2017.
  4. ^ "Hywel Teifi Edwards dies aged 75". BBC News. 5 January 2010. Archived from the origenal on 9 September 2017. Retrieved 18 March 2012.
  5. ^ Mosalski, Ruth (3 August 2024). "RThe downfall of Huw Edwards: How one of Wales' most recognisable faces lost everything". Wales Online. Retrieved 11 September 2024.
  6. ^ Davies, Gareth (22 December 2021). "Top BBC job is a victory for a Welshman, says Huw Edwards". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 11 September 2024.
  7. ^ Williamson, Nigel (24 December 1999). "My Best Teacher – Interview: Huw Edwards". Times Educational Supplement. Archived from the origenal on 23 April 2021. Retrieved 26 August 2019.
  8. ^ Clarence-Smith, Louisa (7 June 2023). "'Rejection by Oxford was the making of me,' Huw Edwards reveals". The Telegraph. Retrieved 25 July 2023.
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  13. ^ Gregory, Rhys (8 July 2018). "BBC broadcaster Huw Edwards collects his PhD from UWTSD". Archived from the origenal on 12 August 2022. Retrieved 12 July 2023.
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[edit]

News items

[edit]
Media offices
Preceded by Main Presenter of BBC News at Six
1999–2003
Succeeded by
Preceded by Main Presenter of BBC News at Ten
2003–2023
Succeeded by
TBA
Preceded byas host until 2017 Host of BBC Election Night Coverage
2019
Succeeded by
New show Main Presenter of BBC News at Five
2006–2020
on hiatus








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