mardi 17 février 2026

Another screeching Labour U-turn

The ‘ghost’ number plates haunting police | Should you pay off your child’s student loan?
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Tuesday, 17 February 2026

Issue No. 359

Good morning.

It’s yet another about-turn from Sir Keir Starmer, and one that The Telegraph and its readers are celebrating. Our Campaign for Democracy has led the outcry over Labour’s plan to cancel spring elections for 30 councils. Now, the Prime Minister has seen sense and abandoned the idea. Read on for the full story of how it unfolded and what it means for the political map of Britain from our Westminster team, as well as exclusive reaction from Nigel Farage.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try one year of The Telegraph for £25, including all the articles in this newsletter. If you are already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

The ‘ghost’ number plates haunting Britain’s police

Inside the battle to save the crumbling palace of General Gordon’s Last Stand

Plus, should you pay off your child’s student loan?

Hard work should pay.

Unlock quality journalism that champions free enterprise.

One year for £25.

 

Campaign for democracy

How The Telegraph forced Starmer into local democracy U-turn

Neil Johnston

Neil Johnston

Senior News Reporter

 

When Sir Keir Starmer appeared on Radio 2 yesterday afternoon, he promised no more about-turns.

Only two hours later, the Prime Minister abandoned his controversial plans to cancel local elections following The Telegraph’s Campaign for Democracy.

Now, Labour is facing an electoral wipeout.

According to a “mega-poll” of 5,000 voters, the party could lose majorities in 10 councils, of which six are predicted to be lost completely to other parties.

Burnley, Crawley, Pendle, West Lancashire and Norfolk were delaying elections but are not included here | Source: Telegraph analysis of Open Council Data UK figures and JL Partners polling

The decision creates a fresh headache for Starmer, who is already struggling to convince his own MPs that he is fit to lead.

Until yesterday afternoon, 30 local authorities would have postponed elections in May, effectively disenfranchising nearly four million voters.

However, communities did not stand for it and neither did The Telegraph. Thirty-two days ago, we launched our campaign, calling for elections to go ahead and for the scrapping of an obscure clause in the Local Government Act 2000, which allows polls to be delayed without a full vote in Parliament.

Councils were looking to hide behind changes to local government structure as an excuse to postpone democracy and avoid a hammering at the ballot box.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the list of councils trying to avoid a reckoning with the electorate read like a who’s who of local government incompetence.

Some of the most financially unstable councils in Britain were among the 30 attempting to postpone votes. The local authorities were riddled with more than £7.7bn of debt between them at the end of the most recent financial year.

The Telegraph visited villages, towns and cities across the country where residents of all political persuasions were joining a dignified backlash against the plans.

We published dozens of stories, putting local issues on the front page and uncovering the failings upon which local authorities would prefer not to be judged.
Read more about how the campaign unfolded here

Plus, Labour now faces local election wipeout. This data proves it

 

Opinion

Nigel Farage Headshot

Nigel Farage

Starmer’s U-turn on local elections is a victory for Reform

Labour can no longer run scared from the millions of voters who will vote them out in May

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Telegraph View</span> Headshot

Telegraph View

A forced but welcome U-turn on cancelling elections

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Patrick Kidd</span> Headshot

Patrick Kidd

Farage beams as ‘gutless’ Starmer caves in again

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Your essential reads

The ‘ghost’ number plates haunting Britain’s police

Crime and policing specialist Danny Shaw yesterday revealed the growing problem of “ghost” number plates. Unreadable by automatic number plate recognition cameras, the rise of this practice of distorting the digits presents a serious threat to road safety. This is essential reporting on how some people in Britain aren’t playing by the rules and are making life more dangerous and expensive for the rest of us.

It’s an example of the quality journalism we strive to deliver and today it’s for subscribers only. If you haven’t subscribed yet, please just click through and sign up to read and join the debate straight away.

Continue reading

 

Convicted terrorist Shahid Butt plans to stand in his boyhood home of Sparkhill as an independent candidate

The Birmingham ward where a convicted terrorist is running for office

A Birmingham ward drowning in rubbish is braced for an election like no other. In Sparkhill, residents are not only furious at the ongoing bin strikes, but now it seems that Shahid Butt, a man convicted of terrorism, plans to stand as an independent candidate. In a further bizarre twist, Sharon Osbourne has been floated as an unlikely challenger.

For subscribers only

 

Why you’re never too old for therapy

Shelley Klein has had therapy on and off throughout her adult life, but it is really in her 60s that she has found it most helpful. She argues that people of her generation and older should abandon their stiff-upper-lip attitude to life. Therapy helps people to live properly, she says. Take couples’ counselling: it is so easy to get stuck in bad habits in relationships for years, but talking to a professional can be a surprising, and enlightening, experience.

Continue reading

 

The battle to save the crumbling palace of General Gordon’s Last Stand

General Gordon’s Last Stand (left), a painting by George William Joy, depicts an attack on the colonial-era hero in a palace that today lies in ruin

A whitewashed palace on the banks of the Nile now stands blackened by fire and scarred by artillery bombardment. British general Charles George Gordon was slain at this war-ravaged ruin in the centre of Khartoum in 1885. In 2023, the first blood was spilled here in a brutal conflict that has claimed the lives of thousands. Now, with help from Britain, Sudan is aiming to rebuild the site where the histories of both nations are intertwined. Craig Simpson, the first Western journalist to be given access to the Old Republican Palace, reports.

Continue reading

 

‘My ex-husband left me to join a spiritual community. Sometimes I envy his carefree existence’

While writer Liz Hodgkinson battles leaking boilers, council tax and water bills, her ex-husband and former Telegraph reporter, Neville, lives a carefree existence in a stately home and pays nothing for the privilege. He swapped married life for the Brahma Kumaris spiritual community, waking at 4am in white robes and abstaining from onions, garlic and sex. While Neville’s life may seem idyllic to some, Hodgkinson reveals the regimented reality hidden behind his “serene” existence.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

Should you pay off your child’s student loan?

If you can recall a time when the resounding answer to the question “should I pay off my child’s student loan?” was met with a resounding “no, they’ll barely notice it”, that’s because it wasn’t all that long ago. However, graduates are now accruing £482 per second only in interest on their loans, and the newest university leavers face decades of debt from frozen thresholds and an extended repayment period. It means more families face this critical question, and it no longer has such a straightforward answer.

Continue reading

Below are two more helpful articles for you this morning:

  • In this week’s “Questor” column, Russ Mould investigates where markets are heading after turning away from the United States. Here’s where you could move your money.
  • Given that 35 per cent of make-up sales are projected to take place in supermarkets rather than at beauty retailers by 2030, brands have been busy upping their budget product game. Here are our picks that are just as good as expensive brands.
 

One great life

Robert Duvall was the ultimate ace up Hollywood’s sleeve

Robert Duvall as Lt Col Kilgore in Apocalypse Now

Robbie Collin

Robbie Collin

Chief Film Critic

 

Some actors can stun you into fandom with a single performance, but one of my favourite things about Robert Duvall, who died yesterday aged 95, is the way he astounded us almost ambiently.

Throughout the 1960s, 70s and early 80s, Duvall cropped up in many of the finest films Hollywood was making, from The Godfather parts I and II and Apocalypse Now to The Conversation and Network, but only vanishingly rarely as a lead.

Sometimes he just appeared in a scene or two, and sometimes in a more substantial supporting part, but you steadily grew to realise these films’ excellence and his presence in them were not unrelated.

Like Tom Hagen, his quietly ruthless Corleone clan consigliere in The Godfather films, Duvall thrived on screen in whispery proximity to power – which makes a tour of his finest roles double as a showcase of his contemporaries’ greatest work too.
Continue reading

Plus, read his obituary here

 

The big picture

A polar bear stands at the edge of the frozen sea

A polar bear stands at the edge of the frozen sea in Wouter van Hofwegen’s submission to the Sony World Photography Awards 2026.
See the full shortlist here

 

Your say

The rise of aeon-length films

Every weekday, Orlando Bird, our loyal reader correspondent, shares an off-piste topic that has brought out the best of your opinions and stories.

Orlando writes...
Are films getting too long? It’s an increasingly common complaint. I rarely make it to the cinema these days, but the last thing I saw happened to be Oppenheimer. I enjoyed it, but don’t remember feeling, at the 90-minute mark, that what I really needed was another football match’s worth of Cillian Murphy looking haunted.

In a recent article, however, Alexander Larman felt moved to defend such directorial largesse. “The idea that the long, luxuriant film ... should be an endangered species is enough to frighten true cineastes,” he argued.


 

Nicholas Young wasn’t convinced: “Not many films stand up to being more than two hours long. So many provide false endings. The audience is content that the story has been told and that, cinematically, the film has been brought to a satisfactory conclusion. It then has to endure a further unnecessary 20 minutes or more, which diminishes the experience.

“In the days before most people had a television, going to the cinema was a whole evening’s entertainment: a good B-film (often presented by Edgar Lustgarten); a short Look at Life documentary; a newsreel, plus Pearl and Dean’s commercials; and a trailer showing the following week’s programme. This left little time for a main feature lasting more than 90 minutes. When the odd epic did appear, it was interrupted by a suitable intermission.

“The mass production of televisions brought an end to all this, and a cinema-goer would now feel cheated by just an hour and a half’s entertainment. Thus, over the years, feature films have grown longer and longer, and self-indulgent directors often turn what’s meant to be an enjoyable evening into a tedious chore.”


 

Robert Danny felt that one epic in particular did earn its keep: “In 1960 I was lucky enough to be taken to see William Wyler’s Ben-Hur at the Empire cinema in Leicester Square. When the intermission came – more than two hours into the movie – I rose from my seat to leave, as I assumed it was all over. I am glad that my companion persuaded me to stay, or I would have missed the legendary chariot race in the second half.”

Which long films do you have time for? Send your responses here, and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of From the Editor PM, for which you can sign up here.

Please confirm in your reply that you are happy to be featured and that we have your permission to use your name.

 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including PlusWord, Sorted, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was ENVELOPED. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Thank you for reading. Have a fulfilling day and I hope to see you tomorrow.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. I’d love to hear what you think of this newsletter. You can email me your feedback here.

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Telegraph Media Group Holdings Limited or its group companies - 111 Buckingham Palace Road, London SW1W 0DT. Registered in England under No 14551860.

lundi 16 février 2026

Trump to give refuge to Koran burner

Inside Meloni’s war on woke | Why you’re tired all the time
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Monday, 16 February 2026

Issue No. 358

Good morning.

In the latest diplomatic headache for Sir Keir Starmer, Donald Trump is preparing to accept a man who burned a Koran as a refugee from Britain. State department officials are set to help Hamit Coskun flee the UK if he loses a landmark blasphemy case which starts tomorrow. Connor Stringer, our Washington Correspondent, has the full report below.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try one year of The Telegraph for £25, including all the articles in this newsletter. If you are already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Inside Meloni’s war on woke

‘I littered London with e-bikes – and got away with it’

Plus, why you’re tired all the time

Free thinking. Straight talking.

Explore more opinion from the nation’s leading comment writers.

One year for £25.

 

Trump to give refuge to Koran burner

Hamit Coskun said that if he did lose his case, he may have “to flee” and seek protection in the US

Connor Stringer

Connor Stringer

Washington Correspondent

 

Donald Trump is on the verge of escalating transatlantic tensions over free speech. State department officials are preparing to accept Hamit Coskun as a refugee from Britain if he loses a landmark blasphemy case this week.

Mr Coskun successfully overturned a conviction for a religiously aggravated public order offence after he burned the Koran outside the Turkish embassy in London.

However, the Crown Prosecution Service is now contesting that decision at a hearing in the High Court tomorrow. The case is one of several being watched closely by senior officials in the Trump administration, which has discussed granting refugee status to the 51-year-old, should he apply.

Speaking to The Telegraph, Mr Coskun said that if he did lose his case, he may be forced “to flee” and seek protection in the US. “For me, as the victim of Islamic terrorism, I cannot remain silent,” he said. “I may be forced to flee the UK and move to the USA, where President Trump has stood for free speech and against Islamic extremism.”

“If I have to do so, then, to me, the UK will have effectively fallen to Islamism and the speech codes that it wishes to impose on the non-Muslim world.”

The intervention is the latest sign of Trump’s willingness to intervene in domestic British affairs amid a growing transatlantic rift over the protection of freedom of speech. Last year, The Telegraph revealed how the US president sent a secret free speech fact-finding squad to London.

The case risks causing another diplomatic headache for Sir Keir Starmer as he fights for his political survival.
Read the full story here

 

Opinion

Danny Cohen Headshot

Danny Cohen

The BBC is letting itself be used as a propaganda outlet for Iran’s regime

One might have thought the corporation would learn from its mistakes in Gaza, but Tehran’s clerics are playing it just like Hamas did

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Michael Mosbacher</span> Headshot

Michael Mosbacher

Fatally weakened Starmer will not be able to resist a wealth tax

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Jane Shilling</span> Headshot

Jane Shilling

Not knowing what’s going on is the joy of watching the Winter Olympics

Continue reading

 

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In other news

The van fell victim to rising water on The Broomway

Your sport briefing

Your essential reads

Inside Meloni’s war on woke

Giorgia Meloni is the first woman to be Italy’s prime minister, but don’t dare call her a feminist. Abroad, she’s a pragmatic stateswoman; at home she’s a ruthless culture warrior. She smashes glass ceilings and cracks down on LGBT rights. The next in our series on Meloni’s Italy takes you inside her war on the woke Left.

Continue reading

 

The Dorset town where drivers are scared to go electric

Known for its deep Roman heritage and countryside that inspired its most famous son, Thomas Hardy, Dorchester is now saying no to electric vehicles. The Dorset town is leading the way in England for its rejection of switching from petrol and diesel. Find out why its residents are not convinced about the change, and which area is at the other end of the scale.

Continue reading

 

Brian Moore: ‘England’s Pom Squad failed without Marcus Smith’

A ruthless Scotland defeated England on Saturday largely thanks to Finn Russell. The fly-half is one of the best in the business at exploiting defensive weakness. Where, asks Brian Moore, was England’s own game-changer? The decision to drop Marcus Smith from the matchday squad meant England suffered significant disruption to their backline and also may have inadvertently raised questions around Steve Borthwick’s Pom Squad tactics.

Continue reading

 

Bike hire apps offered no resistance when Steve parked their devices in inappropriate places

‘I littered London with e-bikes – and got away with it’

As anyone who has strolled through the streets of a modern British city knows, one can find an e-bike for hire around nearly every corner. For a week, Steve Bird went out to be as irresponsible as possible when parking these bikes to see what steps – if any – the multi-million pound companies that hire them out are taking to ensure decent behaviour.

Continue reading

 

The unlikely Hezbollah alliance that heralds a new era of terrorism

Atwi Atwi would have you believe he’s a humble local politician and devoted family man. So, why would Israeli special forces abduct him in the dead of night? The answer, according to the IDF, is that he’s a key commander in a resurgent terror group that is worrying intelligence chiefs in Tel Aviv. Does the rise of the Fajr Forces signal a new and dangerous partnership between the Sunni Muslim Brotherhood and Shiite Hezbollah? Henry Bodkin takes a closer look.

Continue reading

 

Twiggy: ‘There was always a dark side to the 1960s’

As the face of the 60s youthquake, Twiggy is one of British fashion’s enduring stars. Despite a recent survey finding that anyone above the age of 56 is too old to be fashionable, she is still modelling in her 70s. In this interview, she tells Laura Craik about her fame among the TikTok generation, thanks to an awkward Woody Allen clip, and why she believes retirement is bad for us.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

Why you’re tired all the time

Do you often feel tired and foggy-brained hours after eating? It’s no surprise if you do, according to Dr Sarah Berry, who says one in four adults suffers from “metabolic dysfunction” – and that modern life is to blame. Here, she shares a few easy changes that could help you beat the brain fog (and get rid of belly fat, too).

Continue reading

Below are two more articles that I hope will improve your day:

 

Caption competition with...

Matt Cartoon
Matt Pritchett

Matt Pritchett

Cartoonist

 

Hello,

This week you have a (slightly late) Valentine’s Day card to caption.

Congratulations to Brian Baker on his Mastermind-inspired caption below. They’d have their work cut out narrowing down their selection of questions.

Matt Cartoon

P.S. For an inside look at what inspires my weekly cartoons, you can sign up for my personal subscriber-exclusive newsletter here.

 

Your say

The heart of the home

Every weekday, Orlando Bird, our loyal reader correspondent, shares an off-piste topic that has brought out the best of your opinions and stories.

Orlando writes...
One of my many idealistic notions as a relatively new parent is that my family will always get round the table for dinner. I’ve long been a stickler for this – “Is that really necessary?” my wife will ask as I dig out the candles at 8.30pm on a Tuesday night – but our daughter may have different ideas. As Jemima Lewis recently noted, screens are increasingly luring children away, and only a third of families eat together every evening. Still, that strikes me as all the more reason to try.


 

Telegraph readers agreed. “Eating together as a family is an important part of life,” wrote Maggie Wood. “I have seven siblings, and dinner time was when we all sat down and talked, laughed or indeed fought over a meal. Nowadays, I still sit down with family or friends every evening to discuss the day’s events.”


 

Of course, as Catherine Kidson pointed out, the art of eating with others can be learnt elsewhere: “I believe that it should also be an important part of school life. When I was at junior school, we were required to eat our meals in silence. By contrast, at the school where I work, we see lunchtime as an opportunity for conversation. Children, as well as the adults sitting with them, use the time to chat, share experiences and learn more about one another.

“I often remind my pupils that they should try to leave the table having discovered something new about the person sitting beside them. Being able to ask thoughtful questions, listen properly and show genuine interest in others is a valuable life skill.”


 

However well trained the child, though, things don’t always go according to plan, as John W Smith recalled: “We tried to teach our children good table manners. For instance, we insisted that, once they had finished eating, they should say: ‘Thank you for my nice meal. May I please leave the table?’ Usually they complied. However, after one delicious Sunday lunch, my then six-year-old daughter left the table without saying a word. When we reminded her of what we expected her to say, her simple, serious response was: ‘But it wasn’t a nice meal.’ We struggled to contain our laughter.”

Do you sit down for dinner every night? Send your responses here and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of From the Editor PM, to which you can sign up here.

Please confirm in your reply that you are happy to be featured and that we have your permission to use your name.

 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including PlusWord, Sorted, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was BLOATWARE. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Please let me know what you think of this newsletter. You can email me your feedback here.

Thank you for reading. Have a fulfilling day and I hope to see you tomorrow.

Chris Evans, Editor

We have sent you this email because you have either asked us to or because we think it will interest you.

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Telegraph Media Group Holdings Limited or its group companies - 111 Buckingham Palace Road, London SW1W 0DT. Registered in England under No 14551860.