Why Is Robert Peston Not On TV Tonight? ITV Schedule Explained

More bad newsโ€‚for Robert Peston: his weekly political show hasnโ€™t made it on air, and thereโ€™s no mystery about why. The ITV series is on that break, with no episodesโ€‚scheduled before the beginning of February.

The Political Editor carries onโ€‚with his regular news work. Heโ€‚wrote analysis on Westminster tussles as recently as two days ago and is a regular interviewee on ITV News at Ten. But his Mondayโ€‚night talk show, which shifted from Wednesday nights last September, has thrown bare intermission between cycles.



The Monday Night Gap

ITV schedules reveal that there will be no extended runโ€‚by Peston over the next two weeks. The show goes out live at 9pm on social media then later at 10:45pm on ITV1, after the lateโ€‚news. That slot has been vacantโ€‚since late January.

Parliament sits this week. MPs cameโ€‚back from their Christmas recess on 5 January and discussion runs until February. The absence is not linked to parliamentary holidays,โ€‚which made past gaps more expected.

A Programme Between Runs

The series works in seasonal blocks ratherโ€‚than individual weekly broadcasts. Back for anโ€‚11th series, Peston seems to materialise after two-to-four week intervals. Pastโ€‚seasons have taken breaks after major political events or between coverage cycles.

Pippa Crerar signed up asโ€‚co-host last September when the programme moved to Monday nights. She took over from Anushka Asthana, introducing the political reporting background she acquiredโ€‚as a Guardian journalist into the panel discussions.

Where Is Peston Now?

The veteran broadcasterโ€‚still continues to present on all ITV News platforms:

His blog also tracks the latest from Westminster, including posts from 27 January on Labourโ€™s candidate selection row and UK response to US tariffโ€‚threats.

As Political Editor, a role he’s had since joining from the BBC in 2015, he provides regular reports toโ€‚ITV News at Ten.

His podcast โ€œThe Rest isโ€‚Moneyโ€ is still publishing episodes on economic policy and financial markets.

Socialโ€‚media pages are always up to date with political chatter and responses to breaking news.

Why Political Shows Pause

Weekly news discussion programs areโ€‚usually not on the air year-round. Temporary breaks are also influenced byโ€‚production schedules, editorial planning, and guest coordination.

Footballโ€‚may pre-empt late-night political slots but no matches conflict with Monday night in late January or early February. Scheduling is likely to be affected by major sporting events later in theโ€‚year.

The format ofโ€‚the show means cabinet ministers, opposition MPs and policy experts all have to be booked in advance. Those gaps tend to beโ€‚built into production schedules, because coordinating the schedules of several high-profile guests each week takes time.

The Show’s Monday Move

ITV aired from 2018โ€‚up until September 2025 on Wednesday nights. That autumn’s change of schedule saw the programme moved to Monday nights, earlier inโ€‚the political week.

The show was previously broadcastโ€‚on Sunday mornings as Peston on Sunday, until 2018. The original format aired in May 2016 when Robert Peston moved from the BBC toโ€‚join ITV as Political Editor.

Theโ€‚way we consume television today mixes traditional viewing with streaming. Episodes are available to view on X (formerly Twitter) and YouTube at 9pm aheadโ€‚of the ITV1 airing two hours later. ITVX has the seriesโ€‚on demand.

When Broadcasts Resume

ITV has not announced aโ€‚return date through official channels. The networks usually announce their schedules a week or twoโ€‚before the upfronts take place.

There were similar chasms between seasonsโ€‚in prior years. The seriesโ€‚resumed after the summer break from September 2024, and Christmas break in January 2025, and again after Easter recess in April 2024. Each break spannedโ€‚two to four weeks.

For those wanting to check for future updates, they can follow the programme’s social media pages which share when future episodes willโ€‚roll out and who will be appearing as guests. ITV Online Programme schedule; from tow weeksโ€‚back.

What This Means for Viewers

The hiatus is in keeping with theโ€‚common practice for weekly political talk shows. The BBCโ€™s Question Time, Skyโ€™s political programmes and other Westminster coverage formats allโ€‚plan time-outs.

Political coverageโ€‚hasnโ€™t come to a halt with the writing of Robert Peston, and his presence is felt beyond ITV News at Ten. The more comprehensive style of episodes simply has taken a brief hiatus while production lays out its plans for theโ€‚next batch.

Anyone who missed political chatโ€‚on Monday can read Pestonโ€™s latest pieces on the ITV News website. His take on the biggest Westminster stories is publishedโ€‚every weekday in the Politics First Reads newsletter, which you can sign up for here.Read moreAll of Seanโ€™s political sketches are here.

The program will resume its Monday evening time period in aboutโ€‚three weeks. Keep updated on ITV listingsโ€‚or the programme’s social media for confirmed air dates.

Jordan Berglund
Jordan Berglundhttps://dailynewsmagazine.co.uk/
Jordan Berglund started Daily News Magazine in January 2026 after spending the better part of a decade reporting for UK regional papers. He moved to London from Stockholm in 2018 and cut his teeth covering business, politics, entertainment, and breaking news across Europe, which gave him a front-row seat to how traditional newsrooms were struggling to adapt. He studied journalism at Uppsala University and later trained at the Reuters Institute, but most of what he knows about running a newsroom came from years of watching what worked and what didn't. He still reports on UK politics, celebrity news, sports, technology, and European affairs when he's not editing, and he's building Daily News Magazine around the idea that speed and accuracy don't have to be enemies.

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