mardi 5 mai 2026

Met seeks UK trial for Madeleine suspect

The best looks from the Met Gala | Tiny daily habits to lower your heart attack risk
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Tuesday, 5 May 2026

Issue No. 436

Good morning.

Metropolitan Police detectives are trying to bring Christian Brueckner to Britain to stand trial for the abduction and murder of Madeleine McCann. Our Crime Editor, Martin Evans, has the details of this exclusive below.

Elsewhere, as Labour prepares for Thursday’s local elections, it does not bode well that Sir Keir Starmer is reportedly being kept off the campaign trail to protect him from public anger. Dominic Penna, our Senior Political Correspondent, reports.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Telegraph readers can now enjoy a year’s access for just £1.99 per month. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

‘My husband left me for a man. It was a uniquely painful betrayal’

Eight tiny daily habits to lower your heart attack risk

Plus, the best looks from the Met Gala

Enjoy a whole year for £1.99 per month

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

 

Met pursues extradition of Madeleine McCann prime suspect

Detectives are building a file of evidence for the CPS in order to charge Christian Brueckner

Martin Evans

Martin Evans

Crime Editor

 

On Sunday, Kate and Gerry McCann marked the painful 19-year anniversary since Madeleine, their three-year-old daughter, vanished from their holiday apartment in Portugal.

In a statement, the couple spoke of their continuing need to “find some justice” for their daughter.

Madeleine McCann was three years old when she went missing from the Portuguese resort of Praia da Luz

Now, The Telegraph has discovered that the justice they crave so desperately could be one step closer.

A small team of Scotland Yard detectives, overseen by a deputy assistant commissioner, has been gathering evidence against Christian Brueckner, the prime suspect, in the hope of bringing him to trial.

The Metropolitan Police would like to put Brueckner before a jury at the Old Bailey but the German constitution prevents the extradition of its citizens to non-EU countries and Berlin may refuse the request.

This would almost certainly provoke a diplomatic and legal row. If Germany refuses to hand over the convicted sex offender, Scotland Yard is committed to presenting a strong enough case to ensure he faces charges in either Germany or Portugal, where the crime took place.

It is almost six years since Brueckner, a convicted rapist, was identified as the prime suspect.

At the time, he was serving a long prison sentence for the rape of a pensioner in Praia da Luz, the resort town where Madeleine disappeared.

Many believed the German authorities were biding their time and would charge Brueckner with abduction and murder before he became eligible for release.

When he was freed without further charges in September last year, the Met Police resolved to pursue the case with renewed determination. Brueckner has always denied any involvement in Madeleine’s disappearance.

This article is available only to subscribers.
Continue reading

Off the grid and lying low in the woods: Christian Brueckner’s life after prison

 

‘Toxic’ Starmer kept away from campaign trail

Starmer boards a plane after attending the European Political Community summit in Yerevan, Armenia

Dominic Penna

Dominic Penna

Senior Political Correspondent

 

When do you last remember seeing Sir Keir Starmer out campaigning for Labour?

If no answer comes to mind, that is because appearances by the Prime Minister before Thursday’s crunch local elections have been few and far between.

While other party leaders were out on the campaign trail yesterday, Starmer attended the European Political Community summit in Yerevan, the Armenian capital, where he lobbied leaders across the Continent for closer British-EU ties.

Some in Government believe his absence is deliberate, with one senior source saying: “I think it’s true that he’s being kept away.”

Downing Street insists Starmer is busy with the day-to-day work of running the country. However, his dire poll ratings, and public frustration with him on just about every issue, mean it would come as no surprise if he were being sheltered from voter anger.

As Labour sheds voters to Reform UK on the Right and the Greens on the Left, it is little wonder that MPs from across the party regard Starmer as a liability, not an asset.

“Depressing”, “grim” and “hostile” are the words offered up by three different backbenchers who spoke to The Telegraph between dismal door-knocking sessions.

These elections were never likely to be pretty for Starmer or Labour. By the end of this week, we will know just how badly they have gone – and how much the private frustration of MPs and activists will translate into public calls for yet another change of prime minister.
For subscribers only

 

Opinion

Suzanne Moore Headshot

Suzanne Moore

Banning marches won’t eradicate anti-Semitism. My five-point plan will

Attacks on Britain’s Jewish community are assaults on Britain itself. If you aren’t doing your bit then you are part of the problem

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Charles Moore</span> Headshot

Charles Moore

Sex-crazed nudists are running wild and the authorities decline to act

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">James Kirkup</span> Headshot

James Kirkup

Potholes and populism are part of the same story

Continue reading

 

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In other news

The crocodile was airlifted to nearby Kruger National Park before a post-mortem examination was carried out

Your sport briefing

Essential reads

Britain is ‘falling behind’ because of Miliband’s net zero drive, says Blair

Sir Tony Blair has made no secret of the fact that he thinks Sir Keir Starmer should change course on net zero. Now, the former Labour prime minister has popped up again with another intervention, awkwardly timed for just days before the local elections.

Continue reading

 

Alastair Fothergill met David Attenborough in 1988 and first worked with him in 1990 on his Trials of Life series

‘I’ve worked with Attenborough for 36 years – they’re the happiest memories of my career’

Chasing killer chimps in the Ivory Coast; almost drowning with electric eels in Brazil; playing with gorillas in Rwanda; addressing world leaders at Davos. As Sir David Attenborough turns 100, Alastair Fothergill, his long-time friend and creative partner, recalls his many hair-raising adventures with TV’s greatest communicator.
Continue reading

The 10 essential David Attenborough series – and where to watch them

 

Laure Ferrari, Nigel Farage’s partner, criticised Carrie Johnson’s actions during her husband’s time in office

Farage’s girlfriend: ‘I wouldn’t interfere like Carrie Johnson in No 10’

Laure Ferrari insisted she would not become a power behind the throne if Nigel Farage reached Downing Street, while accusing Carrie Johnson of meddling in affairs of state. Yet she claimed to have urged him out of Ukip, into the I’m a Celebrity jungle, and finally into Parliament, moves that helped reshape the Reform UK leader’s career.

Continue reading

 

Two pubs shutting each day after Labour tax raid

Two pubs a day shut their doors in the first three months of the year as they grappled with Rachel Reeves’s tax raid and growing wage bills, figures show. It comes at a worrying time for the sector, which is also facing a slump in consumer sentiment as Britons keep a close eye on their spending. If that wasn’t enough, the cost of a pint in London is simply unsustainable, as Joe Burgis, Deputy Letters Editor, writes below.
Continue reading

 

Alison James: ‘I questioned my own desirability and worth as a woman’

‘My husband left me for a man. It was a uniquely painful betrayal’

It was five months short of my 60th birthday when my life as I’d known it for the previous 40 years ceased to exist, writes Alison James. My husband, whom I’d been with since I was 17, revealed that he fancied other men and had done so since his early teens. This is how I coped with the implosion of my and my family’s world.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

Eight tiny daily habits to lower your heart attack risk

A heart health overhaul needn’t involve a dramatic lifestyle change. In fact, as little as 11 minutes of extra sleep a night, one extra portion of veg a day, or a single set of daily squats, could be enough to significantly improve your wellbeing, providing you commit to the changes, say experts.
Continue reading

 

Met Gala

Rihanna, Beyoncé and Nicole Kidman attempt the art-inspired dress code

Beyoncé, Rihanna and Nicole Kidman

Beyoncé, Rihanna and Nicole Kidman

Caroline Leaper

Caroline Leaper

Deputy Fashion Director

 

At a press conference to open the 2026 Met Gala, Dame Anna Wintour suggested that she was nervous. With Beyoncé, Cher, Madonna, Stevie Nicks, Rihanna and Nicole Kidman all in attendance, though, she probably didn’t need to be.

This was the starriest line-up the Met Gala has ever attracted – it was a comeback, really, after several years of lacklustre names. As Wintour steps back from the day-to-day running of American Vogue and ultimately eyes her retirement, it may also be seen as an intention to go out on a high.

Dame Anna Wintour

Dame Anna Wintour

This year the dress code was ‘‘fashion is art’’ and interpretations on the red carpet took a varied approach. There were the literal dressers – Beyoncé in an Olivier Rousteing-designed diamond skeleton, for example. Some wore pieces of art, such as Kim Kardashian in an Allen Jones sculptural breastplate. Others wore hand-painted gowns referencing artworks by Vincent van Gogh and Edvard Munch. And then there were some, like Stevie Nicks, who seemingly ignored the theme entirely.

As the show-off celebrities head home and de-robe, the most competitive costume party in the world is done for another year. The 2026 turnout will be seen as a success for Wintour’s legacy, and the bonkers and beautiful outfits on display will be referred to for years to come.
See all the looks here

Plus, our Fashion and Beauty Newsletter takes you behind the scenes of the week’s biggest stories and offers you exclusive style advice from our team of experts.
Sign up here

There were many stand-out looks at this year’s Met Gala, and none more than this one. Can you work out which celebrity became a living sculpture?

Living statue dress

1. Sabrina Carpenter
2. Blake Lively
3. Heidi Klum
4. Cara Delevingne

Click to reveal the answer (which you can find in the gallery).

 

Your say

Priced out of a pint

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

Joe writes...
We all knew the moment would come, but it was still a shock to read that we had entered the era of the £10 pint. Long gone are the days of venturing out with a tenner, sure of enjoying a few pints of bitter, and perhaps even having enough cash left over for a scallop from the chippy. No, bars in London today are charging as much as £11 for a pint of Moretti and £8 for a half of Heineken.

There’s probably no going back – the rising cost of pints is an irreversible trend, like SUVs or smashed avocado – but mercifully you can find relics of the old, pre-£10 world, mostly outside London. Indeed, soon after the news broke, I raised a £3.50 glass of Gunpowder Mild in honour of reasonably priced pints in a pub in Clitheroe, Lancashire.


 

Julian Hales provided further hope: “A top-notch pint of locally produced beer has just gone up to £4.60 at our community-owned pub in Essex. It makes £1m annual turnover, £250,000 profit, and is growing at 20 per cent year on year. Free house pubs, run well, can be gold mines.”


 

What to do if you aren’t so lucky? I sympathised with Mark Pritchard’s predicament: “We used to go to the pub before Brentford FC matches, but with a round of four beers now costing more than £30, we meet instead at my son-in-law’s house and drink supermarket-purchased beer at a third of the price.” The same goes for televised sport: watching Super Sunday with a few Proper Jobs at home is, alas, vastly cheaper than enjoying the game with pints at the pub.


 

Iain Wallace gave a grim summing-up: “It’s nice to know that the rise in my Army pension this year won’t even buy me a pint of beer in London.” Unless, that is, one can find hidden gems in the capital. To which end, Richard Sharpe asked: “How much is a pint in the House of Commons bar?”

Would you pay a tenner for a pint? Or are pubs now simply too expensive to tempt you? 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.

 

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 ABDOMINAL. 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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lundi 4 mai 2026

Bleak outlook for Starmer

King finally steps out of the late Queen’s shadow | Welfare pays more than work for 600,000 households
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Monday, 4 May 2026

Issue No. 435

The week ahead looks bleak for Sir Keir Starmer. Labour is expected to suffer a drubbing in Thursday’s local elections, and those he once counted as allies are jostling for his job. First it was Wes Streeting, but now Andy Burnham is so confident about his chances that his allies have asked the Prime Minister’s top staff to stay if he takes over. Nick Gutteridge, our Chief Political Correspondent, reports.

Elsewhere, Hannah Furness, our Royal Editor, reflects on a state visit where the King finally stepped out of the late Queen’s shadow and Charles Hymas, our Home Affairs Editor, has analysis showing that welfare pays more than work for 600,000 households.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Telegraph readers can now enjoy a year’s access for just £1.99 per month. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

The tour when the King finally stepped out of the late Queen’s shadow

Buffer zone invasions ignite battle over Greater Israel

Plus, welfare pays more than work for 600,000 households

Enjoy a whole year for £1.99 per month

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

 

Burnham allies ask Starmer’s No 10 staff to stay on if he becomes PM

Keir Starmer with Angela Rayner and Andy Burnham

Keep your enemies close: Keir Starmer with Angela Rayner and Andy Burnham last month

Nick Gutteridge

Nick Gutteridge

Chief Political Correspondent

 

As Keir Starmer landed in Armenia for a European summit yesterday afternoon, talk in Westminster over who might replace him was intensifying.

Allies of Andy Burnham, who has emerged as the front-runner in this potential leadership race, have begun mapping out what the early days of his premiership might look like, despite not being an MP.

The Telegraph understands that has included discreetly getting in touch with senior No 10 officials to ask if they’d be happy to stay on under the Greater Manchester mayor.

It shows the extent to which leadership rivals are anticipating the end of Starmer’s premiership immediately after what are expected to be brutal local elections on Thursday.

The outlook seems bleak for the Prime Minister, with Labour potentially on course to surrender three quarters of the council seats it is defending in England, cede power in Wales after almost 30 years and lose heavily to the SNP in Scotland.

Burnham is not the only contender waiting in the wings. Wes Streeting’s allies believe the Health Secretary has the 81 MPs required to trigger a ballot, with some urging him to go over the top as early as Friday.

Then there is Angela Rayner. The Telegraph understands that key figures in her camp are torn over whether she should launch a leadership challenge, or bide her time, given that her £40,000 unpaid stamp duty bill remains unresolved.

If anything will save Starmer, it is that all three candidates face major barriers on their path to the top. However, for a Labour Party braced for a bloody nose at the hands of an angry electorate, that will prove cold comfort.

This report is available only to subscribers.
Continue reading

Starmer to lobby Macron for closer EU ties

 

Opinion

John Power Headshot

John Power

Starmer is bad, but his replacement will be much worse

The Prime Minister has at least tried to get the public to reckon with fiscal reality

Continue reading

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

Jane Shilling

BBC weather forecasters have a sunshine bias

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Tom Sharpe</span> Headshot

Tom Sharpe

The Royal Navy will get its first large unmanned warship in just two years. Really?

Continue reading

 

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In other news

Your Sport Briefing

Your essential reads

The tour when the King finally stepped out of the late Queen’s shadow

The King speaking to the US Congress. JD Vance, the vice-president, and Mike Johnson, the House speaker, are behind him

This has felt like the moment where the world has finally got to see the real King Charles, writes Hannah Furness, our Royal Editor. After six days, 8,562 miles and 28,856 words filed by me, the royal tour to America and Bermuda is over. We have established that the “special relationship” is still on. “The special-est,” as Donald Trump might say. I have never seen such universal, and widespread, global acclaim for the King – nor the happy surprise, on both sides of the pond, that he has pulled it off. The truth? This has been him all along, and people are finally paying attention.
For subscribers only

Sign up to Your Royal Appointment for exclusive analysis from Hannah every week

 

A buffer zone in Syria, which is home to both Muslims and Druze

Buffer zone invasions ignite battle over Greater Israel

Israel has seized more than 530 square miles of territory outside its borders since Oct 7 2023, writes Henry Bodkin, our Jerusalem Correspondent. This vast new complex of “buffer zones” is, it says, crucial for its security – a statement indicating that, after the worst massacre of Jews in a single day since the Holocaust, it won’t sit behind its borders and wait to be attacked. However, some see raw expansionism at play and point to increasingly biblical language among some of Israel’s leaders as evidence.
Continue reading

Sign up to Cables, The Telegraph’s essential international affairs newsletter, for in-depth news and analysis every weekday

 

Nick Norwitz has a PhD in physiology, anatomy and genetics from Merton College, Oxford, and a medical degree from Harvard

This Harvard medic thinks we’ve been getting cholesterol all wrong

When it comes to cholesterol, Dr Nick Norwitz believes we’re getting a lot wrong. The 30-year-old Harvard medic, who was diagnosed with high cholesterol in his 20s, joins a growing number of experts who feel the relationship between cholesterol and heart disease is not as straightforward as conventional medicine suggests, and that statins are overprescribed. Read on to find out why, and learn how a ketogenic diet provided the solution to Norwitz’s health issues.

Continue reading

 
Britney Spears

Inside the broken world of Britney Spears

Today, Britney Spears will be arraigned in court for the charge of driving under the influence, writes Abigail Buchanan. It’s the latest in a series of worrying incidents for the star, who is currently in rehab for substance abuse. I spoke to industry insiders to find out what Spears’s life post-conservatorship is really like.

Continue reading

 

Eight easy exercises that protect against dementia

Exercise protects against dementia. It boosts blood flow to the brain, makes the hippocampus (the memory centre of the brain) bigger and increases levels of a protein that effectively fertilises our brain cells. Neuroscientist Prof Tommy Wood explains how to get all of these benefits in minutes, without setting foot in a gym.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

The ultimate guide to looking after your cast-iron pans

The ancient technology remains versatile and effective in the kitchen, but it requires some extra care

Cast iron has endured for centuries, and for good reason, writes Tomé Morrissy-Swan. These weighty kitchen stalwarts possess unrivalled heat retention and are naturally non-stick, but, to reap these benefits, you must look after them carefully. Follow this guide and your pans will serve you for decades.

Continue reading

Here are two more articles that I hope you will find useful this morning:

 

Caption competition with...

Matt Cartoon
Matt Pritchett

Matt Pritchett

Cartoonist

 

Hello! We’re back to regularly scheduled proceedings with this couple and their newborn. Below we have this week’s winner, Dela Quist, with an allusion to The Telegraph’s exclusive on Lord Hermer. Congratulations, Dela! Submit your entry for this week here.

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

’Tis the season

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...
I never particularly minded exams when I was sitting them, back in the mists of time. With age comes knowledge, though, and I now know that it’s an objectively miserable way to spend six weeks. These days, whenever May rolls around, I think: thank God I don’t have to do all that again.

Lebby Eyres’s article reminded me that I will have to go through it again – on some level, anyway – when my daughter eventually sits exams of her own.

What approach will I take? I probably won’t endorse the “sit around for weeks and then panic” method that I favoured as a teenager. Nor, however, do I quite see myself as a fanatical revision-enforcer.


 

Readers have been sharing their views (some taking a break from the maelstrom of exam season to do so). David Webb favoured a decidedly hands-off approach: “Let ‘em get on with it, and prepare for the responsibilities they will have to throughout their lives.”


 

John Hemington wasn’t so sure about that: “I was never encouraged to study. My friends had very good incentives, such as driving lessons. It would have helped if my parents had taken more of an interest.”


 

Thomas Mitchell contended: “The best way to prepare children for public exams is to avoid sending them to the sorts of schools that spoon-feed them everything, then pretend the children worked it all out themselves. You cannot teach academic grit. It can only be learnt by children over years.”


 

Charlotte McCarthy added: “My son has learnt nothing at school. He started revising seven weeks ago, and said he’s learnt more with me in a month than he ever did at school.”


 

Claire Sharp was philosophical: “I always remember my daughter’s panicky phone call the night before finals. ‘What happens if I fail?’ Me: ‘Not much.’ Which is the truth: a child also learns from failing, about how important the exam was or was not. She later said that my response calmed her down and enabled her to sit the exams and get a first. We can encourage and support our children, but we can’t force them to study.”

Do you agree? 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.

 

Morning quiz


Archaeologists have discovered a 1,000th cave beneath Nottingham. The city has Britain’s largest network of caves, which used to be used to brew what beverage?

 

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 DIGITALLY. 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.