Andrew Neil is a British journalist with many titles; he is the chairman and editor-in-chief of Press Holdings Media Group, chairman and joint owner of World Media Rights (WMR), and chairman of ITP. The journalist can be described as a formidable political interviewer who is forensic, unrelenting, and quick-witted. Neil is equipped with a great CV that would make anyone in the media industry green-eyed.
Like many other journalists, Neil’s career in the industry kicked off with a gig editing the student newspaper at his university. Today, he is regarded as one of the most hard-hitting political interviewers on earth, and rightfully so.
Andrew Neil silences 'numpty' Remainer over UK flag criticism with brutal Twitter attack ANDREW Neil has silenced a Remainer with a ferocious Twitter put-down during a row over placing the Union.
Profile summary
- Andrew Ferguson Neil (born 21 May 1949) is a Scottish journalist and broadcaster. He serves as chairman of The Spectator and GB News, which will launch in 2021.Neil was appointed editor of The Sunday Times by Rupert Murdoch in 1983, and held this position until 1994. After this he became a contributor to the Daily Mail.He was formerly chief executive and editor-in-chief of Press Holdings.
- ANDREW NEIL - who is a journalist and broadcaster - has taken to Twitter to criticise Phillip Schofield for his line of questioning on This Morning yesterday, as the BBC star branded his experience.
- Full name: Andrew Ferguson Neil
- Date of birth: May 21, 1949
- Age: 71 years old
- Place of birth: Paisley, Renfrewshire, Scotland, UK
- Height: 5 feet 9 inches
- Spouse: Susan Nilsson (August 8, 2015)
- Occupation: Journalist
How old is Andrew Neil?

Afneil Twitter
The British journalist was born on May 21, 1949. At the moment, he is 71 years old.
Family
Andrew was born as one of two sons. His dad was an electrician and a member of the Territorial Army, while his mom worked in the local cotton mills.
Education
The journalist grew up in the Glenburn area and attended the local Lancraigs Primary School. When he was 11 years old, she passed his 11-plus examinations and obtained entrance to the then selective Paisley Grammar School.
He later attended the University of Glasgow, where he edited the student newspaper, the Glasgow University Guardian, and dabbled in student television.

Andrew Neil young was also a member of the Dialectic Society and the Conservative Club in the university. He also participated in Glasgow University Union inter-varsity debates.
In 1971, he was chairman of the Federation of Conservative Students.
He graduated from the university in 1971 with an MA with honours in Political Economy and Political Science. After his graduation, he became an adviser to a Tory minister.

Andrew Neil Twitter Gammon
Career
After his graduation, Neil briefly worked as a sports correspondent for the local newspaper, the Paisley Daily Express. He then worked for the Conservative Party as a research assistant.
In 1973, he joined The Economist as a correspondent, and he was later promoted to editor of the publication’s Britain section.
The Sunday Times
From 1983 to 1994, Neil worked as the editor of The Sunday Times. His appointment to the position was controversial, as it was argued that Rupert Murdoch appointed him over more experienced colleagues such as Hugo Young and Brian MacArthur.
In 1986, Neil helped oversee the paper’s move to Wapping.
Sky
Andrew Neil Bbc
In 1989, he was made launch chairman of Sky TV, and he helped bring The Simpsons to Britain TV.
Post-news corporation career
In 1994, Neil left The Sunday Times after becoming too high profile for Murdoch’s liking. In 1996, he became editor-in-chief of the Barclay brothers’ Press Holdings Group of newspapers (The Scotsman, Sunday Business, and The European). He later became chairman of Press Holdings in July 2008.
In 1996, Neil published his memoirs, Full Disclosure.
In June 2008, he led a consortium that bought talent agency Peters, Fraser & Dunlop (PFD) from CSS Stellar PLC.
Broadcast
While working for The Economist, he provided news reports to American networks.
While he was working at The Sunday Times, he contributed to BBC – both radio and TV – by commenting on various controversies that provoked the paper when he was its editor.
In the 1990s, he fronted political programs for the BBC, such as Despatch Box on BBC Two and Is This Your Life?
From 2007 to 2010, he presented Straight Talk with Andrew Neil on the BBC News Channel.
He began presenting Sunday Politics on BBC One in 2012 and has occasionally guest-presented Newsnight on BBC Two ever since Jeremy Paxman’s departure in 2014.
The journalist has also presented other political shows like This Week on BBC One, Daily Politics on BBC Two, and The Andrew Neil Show. This Week was axed in July 2019 after Andrew Neil stepped down from late-night presenting.
The Andrew Neil Show is a BBC political program that dissected Brexit every Wednesday.
What happened to The Andrew Neil Show?
This Andrew Neil Brexit show came off air after March 11, 2020, because of the COVID-19 pandemic, and it was later cancelled in July 2020 due to budget cuts within the BBC.
Andrew Neil net worth
According to trendcelebs.com, Neil’s estimated net worth is $1 – $5 million.
Andrew Neil political views
Neil’s former job as a Conservative Party research assistant is among one of the many things that people have taken to be ‘proof’ of him being Conservative.

While the question “Is Andrew Neil a Tory?” cannot be conclusively answered, there are several things that people, including The Guardian’s Owen Jones, have taken to mean that the man is a supporter of the Conservative Party:
- As editor of the Sunday Times in 1992, he hired Britain’s foremost Holocaust denier, Nazi apologist David Irving, to work on the Goebbels diaries.
- Not long after becoming a high-profile BBC presenter, Neil made a speech in homage to rightwing radical Friedrich Hayek.
Andrew Neil wife
Neil is married to Susan Nilsson, the director of communications for an engineering firm. Susan and Neil got married on August 8, 2015, and at the time, Andrew was 66 and Susan 44.
After dating for several years, the two got hitched at Neil’s villa in the South of France.
Andrew has 14 godchildren and no children of his own.
Andrew Neil is a formidable political interviewer who can easily win the title of the best political interviewer on the planet. His rich resume is proof of his prowess in the journalism industry.
While the new television channel has pitched itself as a rival to the media establishment, one of its co-founders maintains ties to one of Britain’s big broadcasters
Andrew Neil has finally left the BBC. After 25 years of service at the public broadcaster, the political interrogator has finally admitted he’s no longer cut out for impartial broadcasting and has joined what appears to be a new, right-leaning news network called ‘GB News’.
Neil, who is chairman of the right-wing Spectator magazine, will chair GB News as well as hosting a nightly show. The channel is expected to launch in the new year and has already mouthed-off the establishment broadcasters, none of which are representative of the UK population, Neil claims.

GB News will serve the “vast number of British people who feel underserved and unheard” by existing television news channels, Neil said when announcing his new gig on Friday.
“We’ve seen a huge gap in the market for a new form of television news… GB News is the most exciting thing to happen in British television news for more than 20 years,” he added. “We will champion robust, balanced debate and a range of perspectives on the issues that affect everyone in the UK, not just those living in the London area.”
However, one of the station’s co-owners is closer to the “mainstream” than Neil cared to digress.
GB News appears to be owned by a company called ‘All Perspectives Limited’, which is in turn equally owned by media moguls Mark Schneider and Andrew Cole.
Cole is a director and board member at Liberty Global – a multinational telecommunications company with roughly 47,000 employees. According to the trading website Wallmine, Cole is also a shareholder at Liberty, reportedly owning stock worth more than $1 million.
Liberty Global has an interest in mainstream broadcasting in the UK, owning 9.9% of ITV Plc, the company that effectively owns and operates the ITV network. There has even been speculation that Liberty could launch a full takeover of ITV, with this rumour circulating via City AM as recently as May.
Although GB News is thought to be competing more directly with Sky and the BBC – both of which boast rolling news channels – Neil’s anti-mainstream rhetoric does seem somewhat jarring, given Cole’s ties to a leading news broadcaster.
GB News already boasts a broadcasting license, according to reports, and will be available to view on Freeview, Sky and Virgin Media. Incidentally, Liberty also owns Virgin Media, which it acquired for $24 billion in 2013.
To navigate Ofcom’s broadcasting rules, which require due impartiality, it’s thought that GB News will mirror the London-based radio station LBC, by employing presenters with a range of views.
Andrew Cole has been approached for comment via Liberty Global.
An Awkward Namesake
GB News also faces some potential confusion with its choice of name.
A current affairs platform under the name ‘GB TV’ already exists, having been founded in June by former UKIP leader Henry Bolton and three of his associates.
Bolton’s channel has only published three videos so far – one of which lampoons the Government for reportedly housing asylum seekers at an army barracks. However, GB TV is styled akin to a news channel – albeit one designed in the late ‘90s – which might confuse those searching for Andrew Neil’s new project.
GB News has reportedly hired former Sky News executive John McAndrew, alongside the former boss of Sky News Australia, Angelos Frangopoulos, who will act as CEO. The platform is aiming to raise a further $55-65 million in investment before it launches and reportedly intends to hire 100 journalists.
This sort of spending will surely set apart GB News when it hits the airwaves. However, until then, awkward questions about who owns the channel might be an annoyance to the anti-establishment broadcaster.
what the papers don’t say
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