Peg Alexander is a journalist, broadcaster, and former politician in the United Kingdom. She reports regularly on BBC local radio, appears on Jeremy Vine on Channel 5 and Steph’s Packed Lunch on Channel 4, and presents on BCB Radio in Bradford. She was the politics and current affairs presenter on the MADE TV Network for over 3 years. She also hosts a number of lifestyle and human interest podcasts.
Between 1994 and 1996, Alexander worked as the co-ordinator of the National Group on Homeworking, a campaigning organisation working to improve the pay and rights of home-based industrial piece workers.[1]
After the European Election in 1999, she decided to concentrate her efforts on her work in the public and third sectors. She was the Chief Executive of affairs uk/ Wakefield’s Council for Voluntary Service between 2001 and 2004 ran Smile Consultancy her own management consultancy company, until 2006 when she went to work for the Children’s Workforce Development Network Council, a government agency. Here she held positions of national lead on the Third Sector, then Head of Regional support where she oversaw CWDC’s support to England’s Children’s Trusts. In 2009 she took up post as the first Director of Bradford’s status as the world’s first official Bradford City of Film.
Since 2010, she has been a broadcaster, initially on Bradford's community radio station BCB 106.6, a broadcast journalist on BBC radio stations, and the current affairs and politics presenter on TV station Made in Leeds.
Born Margaret Victoria Nuttgens, she is the youngest child of the late writer, broadcaster, and educationalist Patrick Nuttgens, sister of composer Sandy Nuttgens and cinematographer Giles Nuttgens, and the granddaughter of stained glass artist, Joseph Edward Nuttgens.
References
↑Martyn Halsall, "Investigators warn about 'pay to get a job' plan", The Guardian, 27 April 1994
↑Jon Burchell, The Evolution of Green Politics, p.101