After graduation Rigby spent a period of time teaching English in Portugal, Her roles at the newspaper included
hedge fund correspondent, retail correspondent and consumer industries editor, before she became chief political correspondent in 2010 and deputy political editor in January 2013. She joined
The Times in 2015 as media editor before moving to
Sky News in 2016, initially as senior political correspondent, before being promoted in July 2018 to deputy political editor. In February 2019 she was appointed political editor and took up the post on 12 April 2019, replacing
Faisal Islam, who had joined
BBC News as economics editor. According to the
i, Rigby is known for "her trademark dark
bob and red lipstick, her distinctive diction and [...] her persistent questioning of senior politicians". In December 2020 Rigby was criticised for breaching
London's tier 2 COVID-19 restrictions by attending a restaurant to celebrate the birthday of Sky presenter
Kay Burley, and was taken off air until March 2021. Rigby had offered to resign over the breach, later saying, "it was potentially damaging for the channel... it had upset my colleagues, and I felt absolutely wretched about that".
John Ryley, the head of Sky News, declined her offer to resign. Following
Laura Kuenssberg's announcement of her departure as BBC News' political editor, Rigby was associated with the position. However, she stayed at Sky News and
Chris Mason became the BBC's political editor. Rigby presented a talk show on Thursday nights on Sky News called
Beth Rigby Interviews, Rigby was twice shortlisted for the 2022
Royal Television Society awards for Political Journalist of the Year and Network Interview of the Year, for her exchange with Boris Johnson over parties in No 10. Rigby won Political Journalist of Year at the 2024 Royal Television Society awards. The judges said of Rigby: "From a very strong set of entries, Beth Rigby was the stand-out winner. Her work is absolutely box office. She is always exciting to watch and her packaging is excellent, always asking the questions we are all yelling at the telly. She does a great democratic service and is a political editor at the top of her game". Rigby won the inaugural Woman of the Year 2024 award (alongside
Cathy Newman and Sam Poling) at the Women in Journalism awards for her "incisive election coverage". The judges described her as "a leading authority in an unpredictable political landscape". Rigby currently hosts a weekly political podcast with
Harriet Harman and
Ruth Davidson called Electoral Dysfunction, which began on 1 March 2024. The show covers current affairs in British politics, notable for being a podcast with three women hosts in a male-dominated field. ==Personal life==