vendredi 29 mai 2026

Why young people aren’t working

Telegraph unmasks people-smuggling ‘King of the Jungle’ | ‘I was part of Putin’s propaganda machine’
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Friday, 29 May 2026

Issue No. 460

Good morning.

Youth worklessness is costing Britain £125bn a year, nearly double the nation’s entire defence budget. Ben Marlow, our Associate Editor, warns against maligning the younger generation as work-shy drop-outs.

Elsewhere, Nada Aggour takes you inside a weeks-long undercover investigation into Abu Hussein, a people-smuggling kingpin, after she posed as a young Egyptian woman seeking passage to Britain. Finally, prostate cancer screenings are to be rationed in a move charities have said will “condemn thousands to preventable deaths”.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try All Access today for just 25p per month, but hurry, this email-exclusive offer must end soon. If you’re already a subscriber make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

‘I was part of Putin’s propaganda machine. Ordinary Russians won’t overthrow him’

‘My mother died when I was 25. The admin was overwhelming’

Plus, Emma Barnett: ‘A hysterectomy would be a gamble, but living in pain is no life’

Ends soon: Four months for 25p per month

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Don’t malign Britain’s young unemployed

Ben Marlow

Ben Marlow

Associate Editor

 

Amid warnings from Labour grandee Alan Milburn that youth worklessness is becoming an “urgent national crisis,” it would be easy to dismiss the younger generation as work-shy drop-outs.

It’s undoubtedly the view of many that those on benefits are happy to sit on their backsides, cashing in their welfare cheques every fortnight, while the rest of the country earns an honest crust.

Several alarming figures in Milburn’s review into worklessness risk entrenching such views. Forecasts suggest that the number of NEETs – those classed as not in education, employment or training – could rise by nearly a third to more than 1.25 million over the next five years.

Source: ONS

Current levels are costing the country £125bn a year, equivalent to nearly double the nation’s entire defence budget, he points out.

The release of new ONS statistics showing 613,000 young people are now classed as economically inactive (meaning they are not in work or looking for a job) will do little to help the image of unemployed young people as little more than layabouts. It is the highest number of young people in this category since the records began in 2001.

Yet, to his great credit, Milburn says these are lazy tropes. Yes, the Saturday job is in serious decline, and fewer teenagers are doing work experience, but 84 per cent of the young people he and his team spoke to said they wanted to work.

Milburn says the real drivers of this growing problem are not a reluctance to work but factors like limited vocational education, an outdated benefits system, and perhaps most importantly, too few opportunities. With job vacancies at their lowest level in 12 years, it’s desperately hard to find work.

In other words, give the kids a break.
Read the full story here

How Britain sank into the worst jobs crisis in two centuries

This analysis first appeared in our To:Business newsletter. For an expert view on the City’s biggest stories every day, sign up here

 

Telegraph unmasks people-smuggling ‘King of the Jungle’

 

Opinion

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard Headshot

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

Tony Blair has lost all sense of shame

The issues he bemoans are in great part the former prime minister’s own creation

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Eleanor Mills</span> Headshot

Eleanor Mills

I got Andy Burnham his first job in politics. Underestimate him at your peril

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Martin Vander Weyer</span> Headshot

Martin Vander Weyer

The age of HR has turned everyone into a snowflake

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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Headlines

Blue Origin rocket explodes

Credit: Spaceflight Now

Essential reads

Marina Ovsyannikova smuggled a poster into the Channel One studio and unfurled it live on air

‘I was part of Putin’s propaganda machine. Ordinary Russians won’t overthrow him’

Half a million Russians have been killed, Ukrainian drones are reaching ever further into the country, and victory is nowhere in sight, writes Roland Oliphant, our Chief Foreign Analyst. So why do ordinary Russians still acquiesce to Vladimir Putin’s disastrous four-year war? Marina Ovsyannikova, a former state television journalist who fled the country after hijacking a flagship evening news programme to protest against the invasion in 2022, told me about the fear-and-lies tactics behind the Kremlin’s Orwellian magic trick of equating an open-ended war with “stability”.

This interview is available only to subscribers.
Continue reading

 
Poppy with her mother

Poppy with her mother, who died of pancreatic cancer in 2025

‘My mother died when I was 25. The admin was overwhelming’

After my mother died from pancreatic cancer, I was surprised to find myself drowning in paperwork, writes Poppy Bilderbeck. There is a strange bureaucracy to bereavement – heartbreak collides with forms, passwords and phone calls. Woven through it all are precious pieces of a mother lost too soon: Sunday roasts, Scrabble games and a leopard-print dressing gown.

Continue reading

 

Presidential candidate Abelardo de la Espriella speaks from a bulletproof booth during a campaign rally in Bogota, Colombia

Millionaire populist ‘El Tigre’ vows to make Colombia great again

As Colombians head to the polls this weekend to choose Left-wing president Gustavo Petro’s successor, hard-Right candidate Abelardo de la Espriella is framing it as “a choice between freedom and tyranny, between order and chaos”. The millionaire social media personality, who calls himself The Tiger, counts among his idols: Donald Trump, Javier Milei and Nayib Bukele. Espriella’s brand of Trumpian populism has seen him promise sweeping tax cuts and to make Colombia great again. Harriet Barber has the story.

Continue reading

 

Broadcaster and journalist Emma Barnett has made a documentary for the BBC about her endometriosis

Emma Barnett: ‘A hysterectomy would be a gamble, but living in pain is no life’

Considering the trajectory of Emma Barnett’s career, you would have no idea that pain has been a constant presence in her life – but the Today programme host has battled symptoms of endometriosis since the age of 10. “I have woken up in pain, presented Today in pain, presented Woman’s Hour in pain, all the radio shows throughout my career,” she admits. Ahead of her new documentary Fighting Endometriosis, the broadcaster opens up about her lifelong struggle with the disease and why she’s now considering major surgery.

For subscribers only

 

Seize the day

London vs Paris: Which is the better city break?

London and Paris

As the capital cities of two of Europe’s most-visited nations, London and Paris regularly fight it out for the title of the continent’s most popular tourist city. Which is best for a short break? Greg Dickinson has put the two capitals head to head, across metrics including museums, cuisine and transport.

Continue reading

Here’s another article that I hope you’ll find helpful this morning:

  • Landlords are turning their attention to alternative ways to invest in British soil – specifically, vineyards. Should you invest, and how would you do it? Esther Shaw explains.
 

Reviews of the week

Paul and Ringo’s reunion will put a smile on every Beatles fan’s face

At 83, Paul McCartney proves his melodic instincts remain gloriously undimmed

Pop

Paul McCartney: The Boys of Dungeon Lane

★★★★★

Paul McCartney old and new, ancient and contemporary, come together on the 27th studio album of his post-Beatles career. The melodious pop genius of McCartney’s youth and the present-day statesman of rock culture look back with rheumy, sentimental eyes on the memories and influences of his early years. His ebullient duet with Ringo Starr is just one of the highlights that will put a smile on every Beatles fan’s face.
Read Neil McCormick’s full review

Film

Backrooms

★★★★★

As bizarre as it is terrifying, Backrooms may not be a revolution in horror, but it’s a beyond-freaky remapping of the genre. This evilly hypnotic film from 20-year-old YouTuber Kane Parsons, about the inexplicable recesses of a discount furniture store, leads us into a maze of sickly yellow corridors. Littered with abandoned objects, it serves no earthly purpose. That’s why it’s weird, and that’s why it’s frightening – even before hulking spectres lope around corners with carnage in mind.
Read Tim Robey’s full review

Books

The Make-Believe: A Memoir of Magic and Madness

★★★★★

In her astonishing and brilliant new memoir, Skins and Game of Thrones actress Hannah Murray reveals how she spent a year in a dangerous cult – one that exploited her undiagnosed bipolar disorder and prompted psychosis. After a public and violent breakdown at a London hotel, she was taken to hospital by police and sectioned for two weeks. Remarkably, this surreal event was kept secret, and Murray is now able to tell the story in her own words.
Read Eleanor Halls’s full review

 

Your say

Beating around the bush

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...
Through a recent letter about one specific exchange, Zanzie Griffin drew attention to what I suspect is something of a national affliction.

“We currently have builders at our home,” she wrote. “They are lovely men who work hard and definitely deserve the odd drink I offer them. However, when I ask if they want a cup of tea, they reply: ‘If you like.’ No, I do not like. I don’t want to have to stop what I’m doing to go and make countless cups of coffee or tea. All they have to say is ‘yes, please’ or ‘no, thank you’.”

It’s not just politicians: many people in this country have great trouble responding to a direct question with a straight answer. I know I do – a fact emphatically confirmed whenever I spend time in the United States.


 

Zanzie’s letter resonated with readers. “One of my office co-workers, when offered tea, would often say, ‘Don’t mind if I do’,” recalled Janet Thomas. However, she added, a plain-speaking vigilante intervened with the riposte: “‘And I don’t mind if you don’t’.”


 

John Edmondson’s grandmother took an even tougher approach: “On one occasion, having offered a cup of tea to the man painting the outside of her house and received the reply ‘If it’s no trouble’, she declared that it was and departed for the rest of the day – without making any tea.” Terrifying.


 

Andy Webb suggested a way of sidestepping the minefield: “We recently had builders working at home. On the first morning I asked if they would like tea. Their polite reply was: ‘Yes, sir, and it will be the same answer to every offer’.”


 

Then there’s the related minefield of getting someone’s order right. This scheme, described by Alexandra Elletson, sounded eminently sensible to me: “At break time, it got so confusing as to who had coffee or tea with milk, and with one or two sugars, that I purchased some black chalk mugs that you could write names and orders on. These made elevenses much more enjoyable.”

Are you a serial circumlocutor? Send your responses here and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of this newsletter.

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

 

On this day

1871 | Whit Monday becomes the first statutory bank holiday in Britain

1984 | Picket line riots before the Battle of Orgreave in South Yorkshire (the coverage of which you can see below on the front page the following day)

1999 | First time a space shuttle docks on the International Space Station

Birthdays: Mel B (51), Noel Gallagher (59), Rupert Everett (67)

Telegraph front page

Plus, in the news today, a garden at Windsor Castle is set to open to the public this summer. What planet was King Charles II’s redesign inspired by?

The newly renamed and redesigned garden will open to the public on July 16

1. Venus
2. Earth
3. Saturn
4. Neptune

Click one of the options to reveal the answer...

 

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 The 1% Club, Cogs, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was REFLEXIVE. 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

Ends soon: Four months for 25p per month

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jeudi 28 mai 2026

Blair’s intervention falls on deaf ears

HMRC gives trans people access to VIP hotline | How to fix poor sleep, according to a psychotherapist
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Thursday, 28 May 2026

Issue No. 459

Good morning.

Sir Tony Blair’s intervention has not been received warmly by Labour. Members of the former prime minister’s old party have called his ideas “mad” and ill-timed. Where does this leave Labour’s new leading lights? No further forwards, says Tony Diver, our Political Editor, while Allister Heath explains why he refuses to join the fashionable Blairite adulation.

Elsewhere, Noah Eastwood reveals that HMRC has awarded transgender taxpayers lifetime access to its VIP hotline, which is usually reserved for MPs and members of the Royal family.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try All Access today for just 25p per month, but hurry, this email-exclusive offer must end soon. If you’re already a subscriber make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Taryn Thomas was a committed member of the pro-Palestine movement. Then she went to Israel

How the ‘Boriswave’ of 4.2m immigrants will shape Britain for generations

Plus, ‘I’m a psychotherapist with ADHD and insomnia. Here’s how to fix poor sleep’

Ends soon: Four months for 25p per month

Save on an All Access Subscription with your email-exclusive offer

 

Blair’s intervention falls on deaf ears

Adams Cartoon
Tony Diver

Tony Diver

Political Editor

 

Sir Tony Blair’s excoriating intervention in the Labour leadership debate yesterday has ignited intergenerational warfare.

The former prime minister provoked fury by criticising the leading lights of his old party, who are currently mired in speculation about the next occupant of No 10.

They include Sir Keir Starmer, whom Blair accused of lacking a plan for Britain, Wes Streeting, who was told he had proposed foolish tax policies, Andy Burnham, who would oversee a “delusional” shift to the Left, and Ed Miliband, who had a “quixotic” obsession with net zero.

Unsurprisingly, Blair’s plea that Labour should focus on policy, not personality, went unheeded.

Those in the current Labour Party hit back, calling the former PM’s ideas “mad”, accusing him of being stuck in the past and saying he was “not understanding what is going on”.

There is a feeling of widespread frustration on the Labour benches that a former leader would wade in so publicly, at such a dangerous moment for their party.

Perhaps it is to be expected that Blair, a prime minister known for his ruthless technocracy, should continue to call out ideologues from retirement.

With no obvious heir to Blair’s ideas, where do his latest comments leave Labour’s new big hitters? Still fighting among themselves, obviously.

Below, my colleague Allister Heath gives his take on the former prime minister’s intervention.

Allister Heath

Allister Heath

Sunday Telegraph Editor

 

There must be two Tony Blairs, the one who ruined Britain after he spun his way to power, and the semi-conservative thinker winning plaudits for debunking policies that originated during his namesake’s time in office. Oh, to be a fly on the wall were the two Blairs to meet!

Our bien-pensant elites have memory-holed the New Labour years, conveniently forgetting that today’s pathologies – feeble growth, an imploding welfare state, excessive immigration, low trust, the triumph of anti-democratic technocracy, culture wars – can be traced back to the vandalism and failures of an agenda they supported.

That is why I refuse to join in the fashionable Blairite adulation. Yes, he is a colossus, and his warning against Labour’s Leftwards lurch is sensible, but so what?
Continue reading

See more of our coverage below:

Burnham: Blair just doesn’t understand

Former PM mocks Miliband over net zero

Plus, sign up to our Frontbencher newsletter for more exclusive, live analysis

 

HMRC gives trans people access to VIP hotline

Noah Eastwood

Noah Eastwood

Money Reporter

 

Debate over the “VIP hotline” to HMRC used by the Royal family and MPs was reignited this month after it emerged Angela Rayner used the service during the scandal over her tax affairs.

So-called “Public Department 1” (PD1) is a special service that allows high-profile taxpayers to get help with their taxes about twice as quickly as the general public.

When I investigated who else qualifies for the perk, I discovered it extends to anyone who legally changes their gender.

Officials insisted this was necessary to protect people with sensitive tax records, but contributors to an online transgender forum praised the policy as “awesome” because there was “almost no wait time”.

When The Telegraph called PD1, there was a six-and-a-half minute wait to speak with an adviser. Taxpayers to the general line waited more than 16 minutes on average in the year to January.

This exclusive report is available only to subscribers.
Continue reading

 

Opinion

John Curtice Headshot

John Curtice

Why there won’t be a Tory-Reform pact

Farage’s party is unlikely to join with its rivals on the Right at the next election but the Reform leader may regret falling out with Rupert Lowe

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Allison Pearson</span> Headshot

Allison Pearson

The deliberate leniency towards two teenage rapists sent chills down my spine

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Kara Kennedy</span> Headshot

Kara Kennedy

If Alan Cumming hates America so much, why doesn’t he just leave?

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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Headlines

The Mayor of London has joined more than 1.5 million Muslims for the pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia

Your Essential reads

Taryn Thomas joined the pro-Palestinian movement aged 19 while studying at Stanford University in California

Taryn Thomas was a committed member of the pro-Palestine movement. Then she went to Israel

At Stanford University in California, Taryn Thomas found “instant community” by joining an encampment of pro-Palestine activists. However, after attending an exhibition that honoured the Jews murdered by Hamas on Oct 7, her worldview was shattered. When a trip to Israel cemented her change of heart, the personal cost was devastating: her best friend instantly blocked her, her therapist dropped her, and a vicious campaign of online harassment and death threats began.

Continue reading

 

Out-of-control employees are blowing AI budgets alarmingly fast

As companies rush to embrace AI, a new corporate culture has emerged: employees racing to prove their enhanced productivity are burning through budgets – paid for through “tokens”. This unbridled digital enthusiasm has blown corporate forecasts, and now some bosses are starting to panic over the cost of workers’ AI zeal.

Continue reading

 

Andrew Watt with Keith Richards: The producer has worked with the Rolling Stones on their upcoming new album

‘Wait till you hear the stuff Keith’s playing on the new Stones album’

Andrew Watt is the hottest producer in rock, writes Neil McCormick, our Chief Music Critic. At just 35 years old, the bleach-blond-haired former session guitarist for Justin Bieber has become the go-to man for legendary artists, from Sir Paul McCartney and the Rolling Stones to Ozzy Osbourne and Sir Elton John. I got the lowdown from Watt on his role in shaping Macca and the Stones’ new albums.

Continue reading

 

How the ‘Boriswave’ of 4.2m immigrants will shape Britain for generations

After Brexit, immigration was supposed to fall. Instead, the “Boriswave” brought in a record 4.2 million people. Yet while wealthy European families quickly packed their bags, low-paid African workers decided to stay for the long haul. This year, thousands of low-skilled migrants will become eligible for indefinite leave to remain, just as the true, long-term cost to the taxpayer is laid bare.

For subscribers only

 

Seize the day

‘I’m a psychotherapist with ADHD and insomnia. Here’s how to fix poor sleep’

After retraining as a psychotherapist, Heather Darwall-Smith realised her undiagnosed ADHD was at the heart of her insomnia

After years of crippling insomnia, panic attacks and losing the career I loved, writes Heather Darwall-Smith, I discovered the real cause: undiagnosed ADHD. So much of the conventional sleep advice fails, not just for neurodivergent people, but for anyone lying awake with a racing mind. To fix my sleep, I had to change the way I thought about sleep altogether. This is what I learned.

Continue reading

Here’s another article that I hope you’ll find helpful this morning:

  • Nostalgic foods have never been hotter, and a chicken Kyiv is still one of the best. Here is Xanthe Clay’s verdict on the best and worst supermarket offerings.
 

Travel diary

Visiting friends abroad this summer? Here’s how not to be the house guest from hell

Anthony Peregrine

Anthony Peregrine

Destination Expert

 

With money tighter than ever this summer, some of us might be heading off to stay with family or friends abroad for what has been termed a “no-pay-cation”. This arrangement can work perfectly for both hosts and guests alike, so long as it is done correctly. The following guidelines should ensure that any faux pas are avoided:

 

Your say

Flattery will get you somewhere

While Orlando Bird, our loyal reader correspondent, is away, Kate Moore is on hand to share an off-piste topic that has brought out the best of your opinions and stories.

Kate writes...
Good morning to you, gorgeous readers. Forgive me if you think I am being over-friendly. You see, I’m joining Rowan Pelling’s mission to make harmless “banter” acceptable again.

In some ways, things have changed for the better. Back when King’s Cross had a grubby reputation, my mother would fend off any attempt at rapprochement with a fast walk and a lowering expression. Less chance of that happening now. However, there was a sense that, with the decline of compliments between strangers, an important aspect of male-female contact had been lost.


 

“Offering polite compliments on the appearance of someone not known to oneself is human,” said Charles Rear. “Lumping that in with ogling/creepy remarks is misplaced and will result in a duller, joyless world.”


 

Several readers agreed. “I think it’s true that British people, and not just the mad youngsters, have a problem giving and accepting compliments,” said Michael Walker. “I found it rather strange, and very pleasing, when I moved abroad and people started throwing compliments around like confetti.”


 

Happily, the flirtatious arts have not wholly disappeared from these shores. “Where I live men and women seem to get along, young people are getting together and having kids, etc,” reported Ryan Brighton. “Mind you, I suppose it’s hard to get too precious when every retail worker over 40 here seems legally obliged to call you ‘love’.”


 

Familiarity need not breed contempt. As Alex Robb pointed out, there can be real therapeutic benefits. “My father-in-law, not far from dying of oesophageal cancer at 78, was walking the hospital corridor mulling over his condition when a passing nurse remarked ‘hello handsome’. The pleasure that gave him certainly put a brake on his departure.”

What’s the best compliment you’ve ever received? Let us know here and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of this newsletter.

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

 

On this day

1936 | Alan Turing’s On Computable Numbers is submitted for publication, paving the way for modern computers

1937 | Neville Chamberlain becomes prime minister (you can see how we covered it on page 15 of the following day’s paper below)

2016 | Harambe, a gorilla at Cincinnati Zoo, is shot dead after a toddler falls into its enclosure, sparking international debate and viral internet posts

Birthday: Carey Mulligan (41), Kylie Minogue (58), Gladys Knight (82)

Telegraph front page

Plus, in today’s news, England’s first official “cycle street” has been built at a cost of £2m. The road gives bicycles priority over cars – where is it located?

1. Manchester
2. Oxford
3. Bristol
4. Cambridge

Click one of the options to reveal the answer...

 

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 The 1% Club, Cogs, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was BALLPOINT. 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.

Ends soon: Four months for 25p per month

Save on an All Access Subscription with your email-exclusive offer

 

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