vendredi 19 juin 2026

Burnham wins Makerfield. Now comes his real battle

Boy, 3, thrown to crocodiles at UK zoo | ‘I lost 4st through walking’
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Friday, 19 June 2026

Issue No. 481

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Good morning.

The easy part for Andy Burnham is done: he has won the Makerfield by-election. The eyebrow-raising element was the scale of the victory, increasing Labour’s majority despite the challenge of Reform UK. Tony Diver, our Political Editor, says Burnham’s next task is not so straightforward. He now has to pull together a credible team and policy plan for the inevitable fight for Downing Street. Burnham has a mountain to climb, and he’s only at the foothills.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. We have an exclusive offer running for email readers. Subscribe today and try a year of The Telegraph 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

Boy, 3, thrown to crocodiles at UK zoo

Age gaps in marriages are out – how does yours compare?

Plus, ‘I lost 4st through walking. You don’t need fancy gyms or harsh diets’

One year for just £1.99 per month

Explore the full range of our free-thinking journalism with our email-exclusive offer

 

Makerfield is just the start. Burnham’s real battle begins now

Andy Burnham wins with more than 50 per cent of the vote

Tony Diver

Tony Diver

Political Editor

 

“They have voted for hope,” Andy Burnham declared this morning, as his stonking by-election victory increased Labour’s majority in Makerfield and set him on the path to No 10.

It could not have been a better result for the Manchester mayor who needed proof that he could defeat Reform UK to stand a chance of beating Sir Keir Starmer to the Labour leadership.

Vote share

The constituency may have voted for hope, but MPs back in Westminster will be asking what, exactly, they are hoping for.

Burnham now has the even tougher challenge of putting together a credible team and policy prospectus for the inevitable fight for Downing Street. It will not be as easy as it seems.

Meanwhile, Reform’s meagre 35 per cent of the vote in Makerfield will raise questions for Nigel Farage, who secured every seat in this constituency at May’s local elections and has now gone backwards.

Is Burnham truly the man who can beat Reform nationwide? Or is his victory based only on his strong local popularity and message of protest against the Starmer administration?

Starmer’s allies are already suggesting that Burnham should call a general election if he strays too far from Labour’s 2024 manifesto in a leadership contest, warning that “chaos” would follow if the party changes its leader.

This result makes Burnham the most high-profile by-election winner since Sir Winston Churchill romped back to the Commons in 1924 after two years in the wilderness. For Labour MPs and voters across Britain, he now has much to live up to.
Continue reading Tony’s analysis here

Labour’s newest MP is scheduled to address Labour Party members later this morning. We’ll bring you what he has to say and all the best reaction, comment and analysis in From the Editor PM this afternoon, and don’t miss the special edition of Frontbencher this morning. You can sign up to both here.

Plus, go deeper with our coverage:

Catch up on the full story here

Follow our coverage of the live reaction here

Who could replace Starmer as the next Prime Minister?

What an Andy Burnham premiership would look like

 

Opinion

Tom Harris Headshot

Tom Harris

Burnham’s stunning victory has pulled Labour back from the brink

The Prime Minister is surely doomed, but the party’s demise no longer looks like an inevitability

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Stephen Daisley</span> Headshot

Stephen Daisley

The fight for the Right has just begun, and Farage may not win it

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Allister Heath</span> Headshot

Allister Heath

Britain is heading for an early general election, and I fear Burnham would win

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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Headlines

World cup diary

Marcus Rashford’s battle with ‘enemy’ Anthony Gordon

Jason Burt

Jason Burt

Chief Football Correspondent, in Dallas

 

Thomas Tuchel has cast Anthony Gordon and Marcus Rashford as England’s on-pitch rivals, and their battle for a starting place is already shaping up to be one of the big stories of the World Cup. Just days after Gordon secured a dream move to Barcelona, Rashford responded with a goal from the bench against Croatia, ending a three-year wait for a non-penalty England goal. Tuchel believes the competition between the pair can drive standards higher. With England preparing to face Ghana, Gordon’s place in the side suddenly looks far less secure.
Read the full story

By putting Emma Hayes in a kitchen set for her in-game tactical analysis, ITV may have been trying to troll the trolls but it has backfired

Elsewhere, my colleague Kathryn Batte has tackled what became an unexpected talking point from England’s opener. She points out that while it was not surprising to see ITV lean into Emma Hayes’s insightful analysis during the mind-numbing hydration breaks, it is unfathomable that the broadcaster did not foresee the issue of Hayes giving that analysis on a chalkboard in what looks like a makeshift kitchen.
Continue reading

 

Essential reads

The crocodile enclosure at Johnsons Zoo, near Huntingdon

Boy, 3, thrown to crocodiles at UK zoo

A three-year-old boy is in a critical condition after he was thrown into a crocodile enclosure at a Cambridgeshire zoo.

Police said they arrested a 30-year-old British man from Norfolk on suspicion of attempted murder after the incident at Johnsons Zoo, near Huntingdon. The suspect and the boy were not believed to have known each other.

The Telegraph has spoken to witnesses, and one told us how the actions of one person, believed to be the zoo owner’s wife, may have saved the boy after she ran into the enclosure to pull him from the water.

Continue reading

 

Smoke billows over Moscow following a huge wave of UAV strikes

How Ukraine found a way through Moscow’s air defences

It was Russia that ushered in a new era of mass drone warfare when it bombarded Kyiv with a swarm of drones in October 2022. However, Ukraine has just beaten Vladimir Putin at his own game, destroying a Moscow oil refinery and unleashing black rain across the city. Volodymyr Zelensky deployed 992 fixed-wing drones at the Russian capital, identifying the city’s air-defence weak spots before overwhelming those areas with a huge volume of drones in quick succession. Now, Russia is seeking revenge.
This report is available only to subscribers

Plus: Russia vows ‘massive’ retaliation for largest attack on Moscow since war began

 

Age gaps in marriages are out – so how does yours compare?

Not represented here are all other weddings, where the bride and groom were aged between 1 and 9 years apart | Source: ONS

Half a century ago, twice as many Britons tied the knot. Today, Ollie Corfe details how we are marrying much later, and why the wider age gaps of the Catherine Zeta-Jones era are firmly out of fashion. Yet one specific group of men refuses to abandon old habits. See where your own relationship stands.

For subscribers only

 
Tina Sinatra

‘You are truly your father’s daughter,’ Tina Sinatra recalls her mother once telling her

Tina Sinatra: ‘Cancel Frank? Impossible!’

Frank Sinatra’s youngest daughter, Tina, was still a baby when her father abandoned his young family for the film star Ava Gardner, precipitating a crisis that would almost end his career. More than 75 years later, she tells Chris Harvey why a new musical she’s backing, packed with the old crooner’s immortal hits, does not shy away from his womanising, violent temper and links to the Mob.

Continue reading

 
 
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Seize the day

‘I lost 4st through walking. You don’t need fancy gyms or harsh diets’

Lisa Buck

Lisa Buck before and after her weight loss, which she achieved by working 30 minutes of Japanese interval walking into her day

At 61, writes Lisa Buck, I was four stone overweight and unable to move due to terrible pain from a slipped disc. Housebound and unsure how long the wait for a consultation would be, I decided to take matters into my own hands and try walking to the end of my street. The first attempt was so painful that I had to use a stick, but I could feel the positivity lift inside me afterwards. This small task became a daily habit that helped me lose weight without really trying.

Continue reading

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

 

Reviews of the week

Twenty-five albums in, the Rolling Stones are still rock’s most thrilling band

Despite their ages, the now-trio – from left, Mick Jagger, Keith Richards and Ronnie Wood – are still gathering no moss

Pop

The Rolling Stones: Foreign Tongues

★★★★★

“This never gets old!” Mick Jagger barks, deep into the Rolling Stones’ 25th studio album, Foreign Tongues. It turns out he’s right. Jagger, 82, and his two surviving bandmates may have a combined age of 243 years, but there is more than enough vitality, wit, richness and joy on offer here to suggest that the Stones remain rock’s greatest advocates.
Read Neil McCormick’s full review

Film

Toy Story 5

★★★★☆

Pixar’s signature franchise was built on a premise that once felt indestructible: toys live, kids love them and both eventually have to grow up. How do you make a Toy Story film for a young audience whose most treasured possessions are no longer dolls and figurines but tablets and phones? The warm and wry but also unmistakably anxious Toy Story 5 is the studio’s answer, and it’s a rather good one.
Read Robbie Collin’s full review

Television

Invasion of the Parakeets

★★☆☆☆

Do you dislike the way parakeets monopolise the bird feeder, peck at your fruit trees and make an awful din? I’m afraid you might be racist. At least, that’s one of the arguments made by Chris Packham in Invasion of the Parakeets, a barmy documentary that draws a parallel between green parrots and asylum seekers.
Read Anita Singh’s full review

 

Your say

Anti-Aperol

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 don’t share Lisa Hilton’s intense dislike of Aperol spritz – I’ll drink it if you insist, and probably even if you don’t – but this particular aperitivo has certainly lost some of its allure for me since I first tried it, probably about a decade ago.

Once so bright and refreshing, it began to taste a little more cloying each time: all that prosecco. Today, the sight of those glowing orange glasses popping up everywhere as soon as summer gets going can feel just faintly oppressive. There are other warm-weather tipples, after all.


 

That was certainly the view of Charlotte Cappin: “Praise the Lord – somebody who dislikes Aperol spritzes as much as I do. Campari any day, please, or other vermouths.”


 

Not a bad shout. For L Shipman, meanwhile: “Pimm’s is so much nicer.”


 

Stuart McClelland was also a firm refusenik: “I tried it once in Rome – I took one mouthful and handed it back to the waitress. She brought me a pint and didn’t charge. An awful drink.”


 

Other readers weren’t so down on it, though. One wrote: “It’s just a bit of fun. We first had Aperol spritz in Sardinia about 10 years ago. It still reminds us of sunshine and holidays. Now we use Select (much punchier flavour) with a decent sparkling wine, ‘proper’ soda water and a slice of orange.”


 

Christopher Hanson favourited a slightly different method: “I discovered Aperol about two years ago and I love it. I admit to leaving the soda out, though. My early drinking days were based on Tetley’s and Joseph Holt’s Bitter – two very hoppy brews.

“As I have aged, my palate has changed, and I now prefer fruitier – but not sweet – beers. The same is true of wine. Today I like chardonnay and viognier rather than sauvignon blanc. So I find Aperol spritz a delightful aperitivo – but it should not be drunk with a meal.”

Will you be raising a spritz this evening? Send your replies 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

1829 | Robert Peel introduces the Metropolitan Police Act 1829 into Parliament to establish a unified police force for London, the city’s first modern police force

1970 | Edward Heath forms his government, with Margaret Thatcher in the Cabinet (see our front page below)

1991 | Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar surrenders to police

Birthdays: Zoe Saldaña (48), Boris Johnson (62), Salman Rushdie (79)

Telegraph front page

Plus, in the news today, a Labour council fined a woman for dropping a kale leaf in a trolley. How much did they try to charge her?

Monica Serro with the kale leaf for which she was fined

1. £250
2. £150
3. £100
4. £75

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 IMPROMPTU. 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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jeudi 18 juin 2026

It all comes down to this

England lay down World Cup marker | ‘As a prostate cancer surgeon, this is what I wish every man knew’
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Thursday, 18 June 2026

Issue No. 480

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Good morning.

A Labour win in the monumental Makerfield by-election today would pave the way to No 10 for Andy Burnham. The top job is all he has eyes for, it seems, after telling Sir Keir Starmer he would not accept a “big role” in Cabinet. Nigel Farage is looking to spoil the party, while Restore Britain wants to dash Reform UK’s hopes.

Elsewhere, England the entertainers have laid down their World Cup marker with a thrilling 4-2 win over Croatia in their tournament opener. Oliver Brown, our Chief Sports Writer, was in Dallas and ponders whether the stars are aligning for Thomas Tuchel’s men.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. We have an exclusive offer running for email readers. Subscribe today and try a year of The Telegraph 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

Channel migrants placed on Question Time by campaigners

‘As a prostate cancer surgeon, this is what I wish every man knew about the disease’

Plus, introducing The Poshcast: the world’s poshest podcast

One year for just £1.99 per month

Explore the full range of our free-thinking journalism with our email-exclusive offer

 

It all comes down to this

Sir Keir Starmer said of Andy Burnham: ‘I hope he wins the by-election, and he’ll play a big part in the Labour Government’

Pieter Snepvangers

Pieter Snepvangers

Political Reporter

 

Andy Burnham, on the eve of one of the biggest by-elections in a generation, has set his stall out.

He told Sir Keir Starmer he would not accept a job in Cabinet, after he was offered a chance to play a “big role” if he won in Makerfield today.

A source close to the Greater Manchester Mayor said he would lose the “wind of change” if he joined Starmer’s Cabinet and became “associated with the Government’s failings”.

If Burnham wins the by-election, he is expected to launch a leadership challenge within weeks, triggering a summer of upheaval for Sir Keir and his party.

First, however, he needs to win, and his biggest challenge comes in the shape of Reform UK.

Supping on a pint of Wainwright Golden Ale and enjoying a rare moment of sunshine, Nigel Farage was in high spirits when I met him yesterday afternoon. The Reform UK leader was confident pollsters had undervalued his party’s chances in Makerfield.

Nigel Farage

Nigel Farage reads The Reformer, his party’s by-election newspaper, at the Fox at Roby Mill pub

Throughout the campaign, successive polls have given Burnham around a 10-point lead over Reform’s Robert Kenyon, but that doesn’t tell you the full story. In more than half of the polls, the combined vote share of Reform and Restore Britain would be enough to defeat the Labour Mayor.

This has given Farage a spring in his step. “On the eve of Brexit, no one thought Leave would win and we did,” he said with a mischievous grin. “Maybe this is another one of those. You can’t discount it.”
Read the full story here

Tomorrow morning, slightly earlier than usual, we’ll bring you the result of and all the reaction to this Left vs Right showdown, plus analysis of the Right vs Right subplot.

Elsewhere, the political divide could not be more perfectly illustrated than with the story leading the front page of the newspaper this morning.

St George’s Crosses and Union Flags have become a regular sight on lamp posts across the country since the Raise the Colours campaign took off on social media last summer.

St George’s Crosses and Union Flags have been flown from motorway bridges and lamp-posts across the country since last summer’s Raise the Colours campaign

More have been hoisted in recent days in support of England at the World Cup (more on that below). One council, however, has launched a legal battle to ban raising flags in the street, making it punishable by up to two years in prison.
Continue reading

 

World Cup diary

‘For the first time in 25 years, England are fun again’

England’s two biggest stars, Harry Kane and Jude Bellingham, were both on the scoresheet

Oliver Brown

Oliver Brown

Chief Sports Writer, at AT&T Stadium, Dallas

 

It was a night of pure, exhilarating chaos in Texas. So many times at recent major tournaments you have been desperate for England to release the handbrake, to go full-throttle, and at this shamelessly over-the-top World Cup they at last came to the party in glorious style.

This 4-2 victory over Croatia could just as easily have finished 7-3, with electrifying waves of attack and half the team queuing up to score. True, the defensive frailties made it a tough watch for manager Thomas Tuchel, but for everybody else it was a tonic.

“Be brave, be English,” Tuchel had instructed them. England paid little heed to the second part, surging forward here in Dallas with a level of abandon that would have been unthinkable under Gareth Southgate.

They embraced the first, conjuring some of the finest passages of play witnessed from England at this level in the past 25 years. Jude Bellingham’s second-half solo goal, purging the frustrations of a careless first half, was sumptuous, before Marcus Rashford’s lethal finish provided the gloss.

Captain Harry Kane, who also scored twice, urged his team-mates to sustain the aggression. “Let’s just go,” he said, and that message should surely be England’s guiding principle for the rest of the World Cup. Far better to see them as the great entertainers than as the joy-crushers trying to grind everybody else into submission.

Are the stars aligning? It is too early for wild predictions, but consider the last time England won 4-2 at a World Cup: the final in 1966.
Continue reading

You can read the full report here and see the England player ratings here. Meanwhile, Jason Burt explains why the side look so different under Thomas Tuchel. Plus, here are the latest World Cup results:

World Cup scores
 
 
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Opinion

Allister Heath Headshot

Allister Heath

Makerfield is the harbinger of revolution that could crush conservative Britain

A triumph for the Manchester Mayor could usher in a radical Leftist coalition determined to destroy conservative values

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Tim Stanley</span> Headshot

Tim Stanley

When there are cuts to be made, Miliband goes bush

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Poppy Coburn</span> Headshot

Poppy Coburn

Social media hasn’t messed up the young. The state has

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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Headlines

Your Essential reads

Asylum seekers were coached by pro-migration charity Imix

Channel migrants placed on Question Time by campaigners

When Fiona Bruce took questions from two small boat migrants on an “immigration special” episode of Question Time, there were suspicions that the BBC show was a set-up. It can now be revealed that they were placed in the audience by campaigners seeking to shift public opinion and “build support for immigration”. Craig Simpson, our Arts Correspondent, explains how Question Time was used to push pro-migration messaging.

For subscribers only

 

Terrorists are using cars as weapons. Secretly, cities are fighting back

Based on a quiet industrial estate outside Bristol, Avon Barrier is a discreet player in the war on terror, writes Colin Freeman. It makes gates and bollards, the kind of street furniture we barely notice in our everyday surroundings. The firm’s products, though, are designed to withstand a truck being driven into them at speed, aka a “Weaponised Vehicle Attack”, or WVA. I visited Avon to learn about “hostile vehicle mitigation”, and how it’s changing the face of Britain’s high streets.

Continue reading

 

Iranian security forces beneath a portrait of Mojtaba Khamenei, 40 days after the death of his father, Ali Khamenei

In post-war Iran, Khamenei is more vulnerable than ever

Mojtaba Khamenei is quietly purging his own father’s men, writes Akhtar Makoii. Inherited power isn’t real power. To rule Iran, he must dismantle the networks his father built by sidelining generals, replacing loyalists and outmanoeuvring rivals who know the system far better than he does. With rivals regrouping and 60 per cent inflation crushing ordinary Iranians, the Islamic Republic’s future hangs in the balance.

This analysis is available only to subscribers

 

Hepburn pictured in 1938, the year she was branded ‘box office poison’

Katharine Hepburn’s torrid life was more shocking than any fiction

Katharine Hepburn’s tempestuous rise from “box office poison” to record-breaking Oscar winner is sensationalised in a new novel. Yet the truth, involving an affair with Howard Hughes, an heiress calling herself “Miss Hepburn’s husband” and dozens more, is sensational enough, writes Tim Robey.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

‘As a prostate cancer surgeon, this is what I wish every man knew about the disease’

Prof Prabhakar Rajan: We need to improve GP recording of risk factors and continue open conversations about PSA testing

I specialise in researching and treating prostate cancer, but my experience is not limited to the professional, writes Prof Prabhakar Rajan. My father was diagnosed with the disease 13 years ago and was successfully treated, so I know how important it is to get the message out to men about a cancer with more than 56,000 new cases diagnosed annually in this country. Jeremy Clarkson’s diagnosis has thrust the issue into the limelight – here are a few things that everyone should know.

Continue reading

Here is another helpful article to read this morning:

 

The Poshcast: the world’s poshest podcast

Sophia Money-Coutts and Cleo Watson

Sophia Money-Coutts and Cleo Watson

 

Welcome to The Poshcast, a riotously funny and irreverent examination of the dirtiest c-word of all: class.

It’s hosted by us, Sophia Money-Coutts and Cleo Watson, two good pals who met a few years ago at a party and bonded over dogs and writing bonkbusters while knocking back margaritas.

After a childhood spent riding ponies, then a spell at Tatler before writing several novels featuring eccentric toffs, Sophia brings her lifelong understanding of the aristocracy to the table; Cleo worked in Conservative politics before writing a couple of very saucy novels not at all based on her experiences of lords calling women “fillies” or of bundling MPs out of strip clubs.

Together, with the tally-ho enthusiasm of two Jilly Cooper characters, we’ll navigate listeners through the choppy waters of how to behave nowadays.

Forget war! Forget energy prices! Every week, we will debate the real questions that divide Britain. Is yours a shoes-on or shoes-off household? Have the Cotswolds become the naffest place in the country?

No subject is off-limits in our valiant quest to decode what “posh” really means. Do, please, keep on your shoes, take off your gloves and hold on to your hats for The Poshcast.
Listen to the first episode here

 

Your say

Memories of Hockney

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...
Since David Hockney’s death was announced last Friday, we’ve received some fine tributes from readers. Hockney was himself an occasional contributor to the Letters page – chiefly as an eloquent advocate for smoking, drinking and being merry – so I hope he would have enjoyed them.


 

Alan Dodd recalled: “I had the privilege of being taught by him at Maidstone art school in the early 1960s, when he was still a student at the Royal College of Art.

“We watched him, on his first visit, climb a ladder and write on the wall in five-foot lettering the word ‘WORK’.

“During a later four-day drawing exercise, he crumpled a newspaper, put it on the floor and told us to draw it at the foot of a vertical sheet of paper. The next day he came in with a beautiful young man, who stood in his underpants on the newsprint; we then drew him.

“On the third day, we took a two-inch square section of what we had drawn and translated the marks in oil paint on to a two-inch square of white hardboard.

“On the fourth day, we cut this into small pieces, went down to the Medway and threw them in. A valuable lesson in how process is more important than result.”


 

Colin P Boyce, meanwhile, wished to register gratitude for Hockney’s guidance in life rather than art: “In recent years, he was photographed wearing his yellow Crocs (even at Buckingham Palace). This finally persuaded my wife to relent and lift her ban on my wearing my most comfortable footwear in public.”


 

Finally, I enjoyed this from Anne Barns-Graham: “Reading your wonderful coverage of David Hockney reminded me of my daughter, then aged five, telling her formidable great-aunt, the brilliant but rather intimidating artist Wilhelmina Barns-Graham, that she also wanted to be an artist when she grew up.

“Aunt Willie asked her to draw an apple. A round, red apple was drawn and shown. Aunt Willie shuddered and said: ‘You are far too happy and optimistic to be an artist’.”

I think it’s fair to say that Hockney, with his inveterate joie de vivre, disproved that argument. You can add to these tributes 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

1940 | Winston Churchill delivers his “finest hour” speech (see our front page from the following day below)

1970 | Edward Heath leads the Conservative Party to a general election win, replacing Labour

2023 | The Titan submersible vessel exploring the wrecked Titanic implodes in the North Atlantic Ocean

Birthdays: Alison Moyet (65), Isabella Rossellini (74), Sir Paul McCartney (84)

Telegraph front page

Plus, in the news today, Trawlerman, a horse at Royal Ascot, will wear ski goggles on the course. What is the reason for this?

Flying Black in ski goggles similar to those which will be worn by Trawlerman at Ascot

1. The horse is blind
2. Sensitivity to sunlight
3. It’s a new style of blinker
4. To match its rider

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 RADIATION. 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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