Kate Andrews

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born (1990-06-24) 24 June 1990 (age 35)[1]
Occupations
  • Journalist
  • Columnist
Kate Andrews
Born (1990-06-24) 24 June 1990 (age 35)[1]
EducationGreens Farms Academy
Alma materUniversity of St Andrews
Occupations
  • Journalist
  • Columnist
Known forEconomics editor, The Spectator

Kate Andrews (born 24 June 1990) is an American journalist based in the United Kingdom who focuses on economics issues. She has been the economics editor of The Spectator since 2021 and also writes a weekly column for The Daily Telegraph.[2] She previously wrote a fortnightly column for City AM.[3]

Andrews was educated at Greens Farms Academy in Westport, Connecticut before moving to Scotland in 2008 to study at the University of St Andrews where she graduated in 2012 with a MA in International Relations and Philosophy.[4] At St Andrews, she was a part of the university's performing arts society and served as the rector's assessor during Alistair Moffat's term as Rector.[5][6]

Career

After university, Andrews had brief stints working for the presidential campaign team for Mitt Romney, the senate campaign team for Linda McMahon, and for the American conservative news website, Townhall.[7] In 2014, she returned to the United Kingdom to work for the neoliberal think tank, the Adam Smith Institute. She then moved to the free market think tank, the Institute of Economic Affairs, to take up the position of news editor.[3] In 2018, she was included in LBC's list of the 100 most influential conservatives in the UK.[8]

In 2020, she joined The Spectator as a journalist covering economics-related issues and became the publication's economics editor in 2021. She has twice been shortlisted for 'Business and finance Journalist of the year' by The Press Awards for her work in trend-analysis, most notably predicting the surge in inflation which faced the UK after the COVID-19 pandemic.[9][10]

She is a frequent panelist on the BBC's Politics Live and Question Time,[11][12] and also makes regular media appearances on other broadcasters, including Sky News, Channel 4, Channel 5 and ITV.[3][13]

Political views

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI