lundi 1 juin 2026

Reeves borrows from Blair on PFIs

How Britain’s disability diagnosis epidemic reached Disneyland | Clarkson’s Farm series five review
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Monday, 1 June 2026

Issue No. 463

Good morning.

Rachel Reeves is considering a return to private sector deals to fund major building projects. The move risks a backlash from Labour’s Left, who say Sir Tony Blair’s use of PFIs left hospitals saddled with millions of pounds in interest repayments and schools locked into expensive maintenance contracts. Tony Diver, our Political Editor, reports.

Elsewhere, Wes Streeting has backed oil drilling in the North Sea and the second batch of the Mandelson files could be published today. We’ll bring you the latest in From the Editor PM which you can sign up for here.

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

How Britain’s disability diagnosis epidemic reached Disneyland

‘My artery looked like something dangling from the roof of a cave’: Clarkson’s Farm is back

Plus, where to buy if you can’t afford the Cotswolds ‘Golden Triangle’

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Reeves turns to Blair-style PFIs to fund new towns

Tony Diver

Tony Diver

Political Editor

 

Rachel Reeves has asked investors how private finance initiatives (PFIs) could be used in national infrastructure schemes, including Labour’s plan to build seven new towns.

The paper by the British Infrastructure Taskforce, seen by The Telegraph, recommends that the Treasury use PFIs, now known as public-private partnerships (PPPs), to pay for projects that would usually be taxpayer-funded, including in education, healthcare and defence.

Under the plans, investors would pay the up-front cost of utilities, housing and other infrastructure, before being paid back with the returns from the projects.

New deals, the paper said, would avoid many of the Blair-era pitfalls and could be concentrated on infrastructure that produces a return on investment, such as toll roads and electric vehicle charging hubs.

Sir Tony Blair faced strong opposition to PPP deals from Labour MPs during his premiership, but continued with the schemes. PPP hospital deals have since been condemned as a waste of taxpayer money, lumbering NHS trusts with around £80bn of debt from just £13bn of investment.

Last year, dozens of schools tied up in PPP contracts withheld payment for repairs, saying the costs were “astronomical”. One cited the maintenance work taking up 20 per cent of the school’s budget, and another said the fee for installing a plug socket was £400, while removing it was £500.

Sir Mel Stride, the shadow chancellor, said: “We all know how it ended last time a Labour government entered into these sorts of agreements – taxpayers paid the price. Whenever Labour negotiates, Britain loses.”
Read the full story here

 

Streeting backs drilling for North Sea oil

Wes Streeting has said further drilling in the North Sea will generate more tax revenue

Amy Gibbons

Amy Gibbons

Political Correspondent

 

Wes Streeting has urged Labour to ramp up oil drilling in the North Sea to boost the economy, in an attempt to capitalise on his head start in the race for No 10.

With Andy Burnham still fighting for his place in a potential leadership contest – he must win the Makerfield by-election to be eligible – the former health secretary used an interview with The Times to distance himself from Sir Keir Starmer’s administration and flesh out his vision for Government.

Reading Streeting’s pitch for the Labour leadership, it is hard to believe that he was a member of the Prime Minister’s Cabinet less than a month ago.

Having stood shoulder-to-shoulder with the Chancellor and the Energy Secretary for nearly two years, he undermined two of their core policies in one fell swoop, calling for more drilling in the North Sea and a cut to one of Labour’s most notorious tax raids.

Streeting’s more cautious approach to phasing out fossil fuels is likely to appeal to voters on the Right who are concerned about the impact of net zero on the cost of living.

Source: Looking for Growth / Merlin Strategy

It puts Burnham in a tricky position: backing the North Sea ban could cost him votes to Reform, damaging his prospects in Makerfield, but aligning with Streeting would anger his allies on the Left, compromising his leadership campaign.

With the Mayor of Greater Manchester fighting two battles at once, Streeting would do well to make the most of the next few weeks.

This report is available only to subscribers.
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Opinion

Robert Tombs Headshot

Robert Tombs

France is set to descend into chaos. Britain can still avoid this fate

This country needs a solid conservative alliance with a big enough majority to overawe its opponents

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Kemi Badenoch</span> Headshot

Kemi Badenoch

This Z-list Labour Parliament is everything that’s wrong with British politics

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Hannah Betts</span> Headshot

Hannah Betts

Where is the English pride in the iced bun?

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Headlines

Your sport briefing

At least 800,000 Arsenal fans lined the streets to take part in the parade

Your essential reads

Writer Leaf Arbuthnot managed to secure an easy access pass despite the NHS app not being on the list of approved documents

How Britain’s disability diagnosis epidemic reached Disneyland

What do Britain’s soaring disability benefit claims look like in practice? At Disneyland Paris, staff say the vast majority of visitors awarded free fast-track passes are British, many qualifying through Personal Independence Payment awards linked to conditions such as anxiety, ADHD and autism. Leaf Arbuthnot examines how Britain’s benefits boom is being felt far beyond the welfare system itself.

For subscribers only

 

Kaleb Cooper, Jeremy Clarkson and Lisa Hogan return for more cultivated catastrophe in Clarkson’s Farm

‘My artery looked like something dangling from the roof of a cave’: Clarkson’s Farm is back

★★★☆☆
Clarkson’s Farm
returns for a fifth series, opening with an ambulance rushing to Diddly Squat – the ultimate “bombshell”. Our critic Benji Wilson has watched the first four episodes, and while he feels the show’s formula for manufactured catastrophe is now blindingly obvious, he concedes, “ever since Top Gear and The Grand Tour, Jeremy Clarkson has proved himself the master of the modern staged farce”.
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From September, George Orwell’s debut work will no longer feature on OCR’s list of non-fiction set texts

George Orwell becomes the latest casualty of the woke takeover of schools

The shake-up by exam board OCR for A-level English is raising eyebrows after George Orwell’s Down and Out in Paris and London was dropped from the non-fiction set texts and replaced with Anna Funder’s Wifedom. Julie Henry says the move reflects a broader shift towards identity-led study, with students now more likely to analyse contested accounts of Orwell’s marriage than his firsthand depiction of poverty in 1930s London and Paris.

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Stephanie Kuku, a former NHS surgeon, was driven by her own experiences to help other couples start a family

The British doctor taking on soaring IVF prices with robots

Dr Stephanie Kuku worked for the NHS before pivoting to technology start-ups focused on health. When she struggled with fertility issues, like increasing numbers of women, she started working with Conceivable Life, a company which uses AI-powered robotic arms. This aims to make IVF far more precise, reliable and cost-effective than human technicians, and early results are very promising, as she explains to John Arlidge.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

Where to buy if you can’t afford the Cotswolds ‘Golden Triangle’

Hannah Adkins has spent two years hunting for a Cotswolds cottage to call home

Priced out of the Cotswolds? You’re not alone. As soaring demand pushes house prices in some of the region’s most desirable villages beyond the reach of many local buyers, growing numbers are looking just beyond the traditional hotspots for better value. This guide reveals the market towns and villages attracting young families and first-time buyers, where homes can cost hundreds of thousands less.

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Here is one more article that I hope you will find useful this morning:

  • Oil is the ultimate kitchen staple, and there are many different types to choose from. Which is the healthiest, though? Our expert has assessed and ranked each option.
 

CAPTION COMPETITION WITH...

Matt Cartoon
Matt Pritchett

Matt Pritchett

Cartoonist

 

Hello! No cartoon to caption this week as I’m away in Norway, but below is this week’s winner. Congratulations to Helen Houghton-Brown who wittily captioned this beach scene for us.

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

Je ne comprends pas

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...
This section isn’t in the habit of routinely denigrating the French, but there can be no question that our cousins across the Channel are guilty of some very annoying offences. Producing Paris Saint-Germain FC, for instance.


 

Melvyn Owen, however, had quite a different complaint: “I gained an O-level in French at school,” he wrote in a letter, “but whenever I have visited France and spoken to members of the native population in French, they have immediately recognised my accent and replied in such excellent English that I have simply thrown in the towel.

“In most parts of the world, people have an obvious choice if they want to learn just one foreign language: English. The only continent I have visited where English is not widely understood is South America. Perhaps that’s because far too few of us go there.”

I must say the situation Melvyn describes – humiliating though it is – comes as more of a relief to me. It’s a deeply unedifying affair all round when I attempt to speak French, and the sooner I’m put out of my misery, the better.

However, Telegraph readers whose command of the language extends beyond being able to say “Chateauneuf-du-Pape” with moderate confidence have been sharing their strategies for using it when they want to.


 

“I have solved the problem”, revealed Patricia Jagger, “by speaking in French, while they reply in English. It works well and both parties benefit. The French really appreciate it when you speak their language, and we have met with nothing but kindness in our years of travelling in their lovely country.”


 

I also enjoyed this, from Anne Keene: “As a modern languages graduate, my policy used to be bullish determination: Je veux parler français. As that doesn’t always work, my latest strategy is: Je ne comprends pas l’anglais. This can stump eager interlocutors.

“However, you should be warned: it’s important to swear fellow-travellers to complete silence. A mere hint that they speak English will kill off any chance of a conversation in French.”

Are you a determined French-speaker? Let me 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

1935 | Compulsory driving tests are introduced in Britain

1967 | The Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band is released

1978 | David Gower makes his Test debut for England against Pakistan at Edgbaston (and a look at our sport page on the following day below)

Birthdays: Tom Holland (30), Alanis Morissette (52), Morgan Freeman (89)

Telegraph front page

Plus, in the news today, which Welsh town troubled by nuisance sheep is hiring a shepherd to round them up?

1. Caernarfon
2. Blaenavon
3. Caerphilly
4. Aberystwyth

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 BACKWATER. 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

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dimanche 31 mai 2026

The man who could sink Reform

Arsenal’s dogs of war have only themselves to blame | Britain’s economy is built on housing wealth. Now it’s slipping away
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Sunday, 31 May 2026

Issue No. 455

Good morning.

Nigel Farage has warned that the insurgent Restore movement could deny Reform victory in the Makerfield by-election and help propel Andy Burnham to No 10. Might Farage wish he’d never made an enemy of Rupert Lowe, now Restore’s leader? Nick Gutteridge, our Chief Political Correspondent, investigates.

Elsewhere, it was agony for Arsenal as they lost on penalties to Paris St-Germain. In the end, it was two terrible, and flamboyant, spot kicks that proved the difference. Oliver Brown, our Chief Sports Writer, was there to witness the heartache.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph 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

Britain’s economy is built on housing wealth. Now it’s slipping away

With no medicine and no escape, Gaza’s cancer patients watch their tumours grow

Plus, six annoying signs you’re getting older (and what to do about them)

Ends soon: Four months for 25p per month

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

 

Farage cast out ‘contemptible’ Rupert Lowe. Now, his party is raining on Reform’s parade

Nick Gutteridge

Nick Gutteridge

Chief Political Correspondent

 

A poll of voters in Makerfield, published this week, showed what focus groups had increasingly been indicating to pollsters in recent weeks: Restore is making remarkable inroads among working-class voters.

Voters in Makerfield, and other areas like it, have started bringing up Rupert Lowe’s party unprompted when asked about their political views. That kind of name recognition is highly unusual for a political movement that was only set up a year ago, initially as a pressure group, and which has just one MP.

The Survation poll put Restore on 7 per cent of the vote in the Greater Manchester constituency, which would be enough to deny Reform victory, and put Andy Burnham in the Commons and on a path to No 10.

Much of Restore’s support is thought to be down to a highly effective social media operation reaching millions of voters.

Lowe’s party has also found a cheerleader in Elon Musk, who endorsed it in several posts on X this week, having previously flirted with the idea of funding Reform.

However, opponents point to the extreme views held by some of Restore’s prominent supporters, raising concerns that such opinions risk being normalised by the rise of Lowe’s party.

This story is available only to subscribers.

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Arsenal’s dogs of war have only themselves to blame for lack of ambition

Gabriel Magalhaes, a rock for Arsenal all season, missed the final penalty

Oliver Brown

Oliver Brown

Chief Sports Writer, at Puskas Arena

 

As you cast your eyes beyond all the golden ticker-tape and Parisian rapture, you noticed an Arsenal team trapped in their own private torture.

The brutal reality for these players was that, instead of truly chasing a victory in the club’s most consequential game for 20 years, they were preoccupied with trying not to lose. Rather than seizing on the thrill of a sixth-minute lead to put a shocked Paris St-Germain to the sword, they sat stubbornly on that slender advantage as if there were no alternative. And when that plan failed, they prayed for penalties, only for Gabriel Magalhães’s miss to expose their lack of ambition in desperate fashion.

PSG players celebrate with the trophy after winning 4-3 on penalties

Ultimately, Arsenal were the architects of their own demise, their poverty of imagination so acute that PSG managed four times as many passes, three times as many touches in the opposition box, and three times as many shots. The gulf was almost embarrassing at times, with Arsenal overwhelmed by negativity to the extent that their expected goals ratio, the metric evaluating the possibility of a specific shot resulting in a goal, was 0.44 to PSG’s 1.77.

Mikel Arteta’s team preferred to exasperate, not exhilarate, genuinely believing that they could grind PSG into submission. The only problem is that PSG have the gifts to thwart even the most elaborate defensive scheme. Beauty, frankly, slayed the beast.


This story is available only to subscribers.

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Read the full report on Arsenal’s defeat

Sign up to Sport Briefing for Thom Gibbs’s take on the biggest sports news every morning

 

Opinion

Kemi Badenoch Headshot

Kemi Badenoch

This Z-list Labour Parliament is everything that’s wrong with British politics

Politics shouldn’t be a last refuge for those who have done nothing else

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Janet Daley</span> Headshot

Janet Daley

Labour is waging class war on a country that just wants a chance to succeed

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Daniel Hannan</span> Headshot

Daniel Hannan

The murder of Henry Nowak exposes the deadly truth about ‘anti-racism’

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In other news

More than 400 rioters arrested as PSG fans’ celebrations turn violent

Weekend reads

Britain’s economy is built on housing wealth. And now it’s slipping away

The house-price gravy train has ground to a halt. For decades, soaring property values have made generations of British homeowners startlingly rich, skyrocketing by 300 per cent in real terms since 1982 – a pace unmatched across the G7. That golden era is over. Property values in real terms have been falling for four years, and now the war in Iran is driving up borrowing costs to trigger a slow-burning property downturn. The unfolding slump will have major ramifications for the wider British economy.

Continue reading

 

Najat al-Loh says she has 'no money' to travel outside Gaza for cancer treatment

With no medicine and no escape, Gaza’s cancer patients watch their tumours grow

With aid restricted, Hamas showing little sign of giving up its guns and some talking of a return to war, life in Gaza is miserable enough as it is, writes Henry Bodkin, our Jerusalem Correspondent. For the roughly 13,000 with cancer, it’s hell on earth. Bodkin interviewed multiple patients who painted a disturbing picture of a desperate and often futile search for cancer treatment: diluted chemotherapy at best and virtually no radiotherapy. What they need is safe passage out of Gaza, but medical visas from third countries, including Britain, are limited, and Israel “arbitrarily” turns people away at the border.

Continue reading

 

As the jobs market weakens, companies don’t have to work as hard to attract new talent with employee benefits

The death of work perks

As costs for employers rise, companies are rolling back on the once-generous benefits and freebies they offered to keep staff motivated. It’s not just the fluffy, and sometimes unnecessary, perks getting the chop either. Some are starting to relabel legal minimums, such as holiday leave, sick pay and even “free water” as benefits to boast about.

Continue reading

 

Lesley Manville is nominated for a Tony award for her role in Oedipus on Broadway

Lesley Manville: ‘Sex scenes? You just have to crack on’

Lesley Manville is the classic late bloomer who became recognised as one of Britain’s greatest actresses, adored in particular for her work with Mike Leigh. Here, ahead of the Tonys in New York, she talks about family tragedy, early insecurities and disrobing at the age of 70.

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Your Sunday

Six annoying signs you’re getting older (and what to do about them)

We lose scalp hair and may get more facial hair as we age

Shrinking, constantly going to the lavatory and unexplained hair growths are some of the many pesky things that occur as the number of candles on our birthday cake increases. So what can we do about them? Our experts reveal their top tips to turn back the clock.

Continue reading

 

Devil’s Advocate

Plastic gifts? I have serious misgivings

Every week, one of our writers takes an unfashionable position, either defending a subject that’s been unfairly maligned or criticising something that most people love.

Londoners cartoon
Madeleine Ross

Madeleine Ross

Money Reporter

 

Naked consumerism is an ugly thing. I am not sure that is the conclusion I was supposed to draw from a recent Harry Potter Studio Tours press trip. However, after being handed a lump of red plastic on a key chain – the Philosopher’s Stone, £10 – and stomping my way through the airport duty-free maze of the shop, it was unavoidable.

Under the watchful gaze of some of Britain’s greatest actors, ghoulishly projected on to the walls, a receptive customer could spend hundreds of pounds on tacky souvenirs. Amid it all, the impressive craftsmanship behind the sets of these beautiful films was overwhelmed.

This is just one example of a wider problem. The country has a harmful addiction to plastic rubbish (wrapped and transported in yet more plastic).

The trend is ruining our charity shops, cramming out high-value antiques with disposable rubbish.

It’s also economically nonsensical, requiring large amounts of national expenditure to be squandered on objects that will break in five minutes and are mostly manufactured abroad. It’s feeding our economy with empty calories.

What’s even worse is that it’s hurting the climate. Each British household chucks away enough plastic every year to fill 10 bins – and only half of it is recycled. A survey by Everyday Plastic earlier this year found that 82 billion pieces of plastic packaging were thrown away annually, which it called a “national crisis”.

Oliver Bonas made a cool £8m profit selling tat to the middle classes last year, while simultaneously warning that households faced a cost-of-living squeeze that would make it more difficult to afford its £28 water bottles.

Even Waterstones – which is supposed to sell books – isn’t immune. Large swathes of its shop floors are now dedicated to random “reading accoutrements”, almost all of which could be replaced with natural light and a single bookmark.

I cannot blame only the shops, though. They’re simply responding to demand.

As a grown-up with some disposable income, I am not totally immune to a piece of plastic nonsense. In my kitchen is a soap dispenser in the shape of a naked woman and I own a frankly silly croissant-shaped butter dish as well.

I am trying to be better. To buy only things I really need. Not to buy souvenirs on every unmemorable trip I take. To tell my friends not to spend money on such junk for my birthday or Christmas – to spend it in our beleaguered pubs and restaurants instead. Not, finally, to order anything from Temu, ever.

Do you agree with Maddie? Send your replies 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.

 

One great life

Jacqui Chan, actress who enjoyed a 70-year career and was famous as Lord Snowdon’s ‘first true love’

Jacqui Chan with Rex Harrison in Cleopatra (1963): ‘My death scene was a particular challenge because… I could see right up the togas of the men bending over me’

Jacqueline (Jacqui) Chan, who has died aged 91, was an actress of Chinese heritage who trained as a dancer in England and enjoyed a long career on stage and screen. She became a darling of Sixties gossip columnists as the girlfriend and muse of the photographer Antony Armstrong-Jones, the future Lord Snowdon, before he married Princess Margaret.

In films, she was best-known as Gwennie Lee, the mild-mannered Hong Kong prostitute in The World of Suzie Wong (1960). Just a few months before the film was released, Princess Margaret’s engagement to Armstrong-Jones was announced. Dredging through his romantic history, the press found that Chan had been his lover, and she was propelled to overnight celebrity, which she rather enjoyed.

Jacqui Chan, 1962

Anne de Courcy, in her 2008 biography of Lord Snowdon, wrote: “Jacqui, with her porcelain looks and exotic charm, was Tony’s first real love.”

Despite numerous further roles in film and TV, Chan remained fixed in the public’s mind for the link to Lord Snowdon. In 2017, the story was garishly presented to a new generation when it featured in The Crown, with Chan (played by Alice Hewkin) featuring in a graphic sex scene with Armstrong-Jones (Matthew Goode) on the staircase of his studio.

Read the full obituary here

 

On this day

1669 | Final entry in Samuel Pepys’s diary, citing poor eyesight

1911 | The Titanic is launched in Belfast (and coverage the following day on page 12 of our newspaper)

1919 | Flying boat lands in Plymouth completing first flight across the Atlantic

2008 | Usain Bolt breaks the 100m world record: 9.72s

Birthdays
Colin Farrell (50), Viktor Orbán (63), Clint Eastwood (96)

 

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 MUNDANELY. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Thank you for reading.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

P.S. Please share your thoughts on the newsletter here.

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