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Julie Etchingham was born and raised in Leicester, Leicestershire, where both her parents were teachers. She was raised as a Roman Catholic, and educated at the city’s English Martyrs Catholic School. After school she attended Newnham College at the University of Cambridge where she gained a BA (Honours) degree in English. She was the first girl from her school to attend Cambridge, and while reading English there was taught by Germaine Greer. She also co-presented BBC Radio Cambridgeshire’s student programme On the Edge, produced by Ian Peacock. She got her first job in journalism with BBC Radio Leicester while still at school, and joined the BBC graduate programme from university.

Working at BBC Midlands, Julie Etchingham became a presenter on Midlands Today, but soon moved on to present national programmes after moving to London. Her credits at the BBC include BBC’s Breakfast News, Newsround (where she beat 1,000 other competitors to the job in 1994) and the corporation’s long running Holiday programme. Julie Etchingham joined Sky News in 2002, where she hosted a number of shows for the channel, including Sky News Today. She was also an occasional presenter on Five News after Sky took over as news provider for Five in January 2005.

On 29 October 2007, during a speech by David Cameron, Julie Etchingham’s microphone was left open and an aside was accidentally broadcast during live coverage of the Conservative leader’s address. Speaking on the issue of immigration, Mr Cameron said: “Let me outline the action that a Conservative government would take. As we have seen, some of the increase in population size results from natural change birth rates, death rates. Here our policy should be obvious….” At this point, Julie Etchingham was clearly heard to say: “Extermination.”Sky News said afterwards that her comment was “regrettable”. Julie Etchingham later described the incident as “not my finest hour. I apologised to Cameron personally”. Cameron took the incident in good jest, recorded a parody of the incident for Julie Etchingham’s 40th birthday, and had a toy Dalek delivered to her home.

On 31 October 2007, ITV confirmed that in January 2008, Julie Etchingham would move to present the relaunched News at Ten with Sir Trevor McDonald. The programme returned on 14 January. In June 2009, it was reported in the media that the President of Pakistan, Asif Ali Zardari, had stopped a plane from flying out of Pakistan after he heard Julie Etchingham was running late after an interview between the two. In October 2009, it was announced that Julie Etchingham would present a relaunched Tonight programme from early 2010 with the show airing once a week on Thursday nights.

In April 2011, Julie Etchingham co-hosted ITV’s coverage of the Wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton with Phillip Schofield. It was announced in April 2012 that she and Schofield would present the broadcaster’s coverage of the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee in June. In March 2013, she travelled to Rome to provide coverage of the election of Pope Francis for ITV News.

In March 2015 it was announced that Julie Etchingham would chair a televised leaders debate for ITV ahead of the 2015 general election, the only leaders debate featuring Prime Minister David Cameron to be held that year. The debate took place on 2 April. Andrew Pettie of The Telegraph described Julie Etchingham’s presenting style as “composure itself”, adding that it was “a bit robotic but this was no bad thing: it was refreshing to see a TV interviewer resolutely refusing to hog the limelight.” She later co-presented the ITV coverage of the general election with Tom Bradby.

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