jeudi 12 février 2026

Labour ‘up for’ closer ties with Europe

The problem with the BBC’s Winter Olympics coverage | Why now is the time to buy a country home
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Thursday, 12 February 2026

Issue No. 354

Good morning.

Rachel Reeves has said closer ties with the EU are the “biggest prize” – a far cry from her stance last month. Szu Ping Chan, our Economics Editor, unpicks the Chancellor’s comments from last night, and examines what they reveal about Sir Keir Starmer and his Cabinet.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try four months of The Telegraph for £1, including all the articles in this newsletter. If you are already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

The problem with the BBC’s Winter Olympics coverage

Why now is the time to buy a country home

What every man should know about prostate cancer

We speak your mind.

Enjoy free-thinking comment that champions your values.

Four months for £1.

 

Labour ‘up for’ closer ties with Europe

Rachel Reeves has said she wants closer ties to Brussels despite saying Britain could not “go back in time” last month

Rachel Reeves has said that she is “up for” taking Britain closer to the EU.

The Chancellor described current negotiations over youth mobility, food standards and energy policy as “first base” and said closer relations with the bloc represented the “biggest prize” for the British economy.

Speaking at an event in London, Reeves said Labour was willing to cede more powers to Brussels to secure a better economic deal.

It is a significant shift in tone from the Chancellor who, just weeks ago, told an audience in Davos that Britain could not go “back in time” in its relationship with the EU. Below, Szu Ping Chan, our Economics Editor, takes a closer look at Reeves’s comments.

Szu Ping Chan

Szu Ping Chan

Economics Editor

 

Brexit reset or Brexit surrender? Rachel Reeves made it clear last night that she would be pushing for closer trade ties with the European Union.

The Chancellor declared that she was “up for” doing more business with the bloc – and the arguments that will entail – even if it means ceding more powers to Brussels.

“I strongly believe that Britain’s future is inextricably bound with that of Europe,” she declared. “And that is for economic reasons ... but also reasons of security, resilience and defence.”

What price is she willing to pay? The first thing any seasoned trade negotiator will tell you is that, when it comes to doing trade deals, countries don’t have friends, they have interests. Reeves sees closer alignment as key to unlocking higher economic growth. She also wants to bring standards in line with the bloc in an attempt to remove the red tape strangling businesses.

At the same time, Brussels is setting out its own “Made in Europe” strategy that threatens to shut out Britain and also wants more free movement of people through a youth mobility deal. In short, closer alignment probably also involves relinquishing powers, and signing cheques, to Brussels.

Such a move potentially faces a backlash from voters as well as the White House, which is also negotiating an enhanced trade deal with Britain.

Tying Britain’s fate to the EU’s moribund economy may not be wise –but, with pressure from his own Cabinet building, a weakened Sir Keir Starmer may not be able to resist pressure to reverse Brexit.
Labour ‘up for’ closer ties with EU

Plus,
Starmer under pressure from Labour women over No 10 ‘boys’ club culture’

 

Opinion

Allister Heath Headshot

Allister Heath

Labour’s lurch to the Left is the spark that will ignite a revolution

British public attitudes have shifted dramatically. More and more of us are sick and tired of ever increasing taxes and spending

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Rowan Pelling</span> Headshot

Rowan Pelling

If my boyfriend told the world he’d cheated on me, all he would get is a slap

Continue reading

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

Tom Sharpe

There are more than a thousand rogue tankers at sea. Many don’t even have crews

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Prince William in the Old Town of AlUla

The Princes joined artists and members of the local community in the Old Town of AlUla

Your essential reads

‘The BBC’s Winter Olympics coverage is really starting to grate’

Former alpine skier Chemmy Alcott is all smiles on Winter Olympics duty for BBC Sport

Anyone tuning in to the BBC’s Winter Olympics coverage this week might have been confused at the lack of journalism – and at the use of the word “devo’d”. Another medal chance for Team GB had gone begging and, once again, the studio chat was about brave efforts and personal journeys. By treating elite competitors with indulgence rather than professional scrutiny, the corporation is sweeping the real issues under the carpet, writes Simon Briggs. The column provoked a healthy debate in the comments section, and as one reader wrote: “The BBC turn pretty much all their sports coverage, what little they have, into a version of Blue Peter.”

Continue reading

 

Deadly Victorian diseases are making a comeback in Britain

We’re used to the common cold, flu and Covid circulating in Britain. However, scientists are alarmed that viruses that had their peak in the early 20th century – whooping cough, diphtheria and polio – are at risk of making a comeback. Our experts explain why, and what needs to be done.

Continue reading

 

Why now is the time to buy a country home

Now is the best time to move to the country. Estate agents report that a saturated market and a year of inactivity means there is a real sense of urgency among sellers. With prices being cut by 20 per cent in some cases, there is no better time to seek out a bargain.

Continue reading

 

Elon Musk gives Donald Trump and lawmakers a tour of SpaceX

AI mania is now spilling into space

Elon Musk is merging SpaceX with xAI to build a “sentient sun”. Seeking a £1.1tn valuation, he aims to harvest solar energy to create a superintelligence in orbit. His backers say the future of AI lies in space – but, as Matthew Field reports, critics claim this “sudden promotion” is a cynical attempt to cash out before reality bursts the stock market’s AI bubble.

Continue reading

 

Masabane Cecilia Rangwanasha won the song prize at Cardiff Singer of the World

The 10 most exciting young musicians in the world

The classical music scene is thriving in certain quarters, with a select band of international stars keeping the art form alive. Ivan Hewett, our critic, suggests 10 talents aged 35 and under who you need to see, and who are coming to Britain in the next few months – from South Korean pianist Seong-Jin Cho to South African soprano Masabane Cecilia Rangwanasha.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

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

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. Here are a few things that men, their partners and their families should know.

Continue reading

Here are two more helpful articles for you this morning:

 

From the fashion desk

Anne Hathaway channels Wintour in Ralph Lauren

Anne Hathaway

Anne Hathaway will return as Andy Sachs, the hapless fashion magazine assistant turned Kool-Aid-drinking editor, in the Devil Wears Prada sequel

Lisa Armstrong

Lisa Armstrong

Head of Fashion

 

The new Devil Wears Prada film will not be released until later this spring, but its star Anne Hathaway was living up to her role as the fashion magazine assistant turned power editrix Andy Sachs last night.

Hathaway attended the Ralph Lauren show at New York Fashion Week wearing a back-plunging, liquid-tar dress by the designer, with a feathery cloud shrug draped elegantly off her shoulders. She also wore her sunglasses indoors. At night.

That’s a signature move of Anna Wintour, Vogue’s global editorial director – and Hathaway has perhaps picked up on it for her cosplay.
Read Lisa’s full catwalk – and front row – review

 

The morning quiz

Fly tipping


A farmer has been left with a £40,000 clean-up bill after 200 tons of waste was fly-tipped on his land. The huge pile of rubbish was dumped on his field – near where – last summer?

 

Your say

Straight talking

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...
In recent days, The Telegraph’s letter-writers have been waging war against euphemism – and one evasive expression in particular. It all began with Sir Stephen Fry, who, as our Peterborough column reported, complained on a podcast about “people saying ‘pass’ instead of die”.


 

This struck a chord with the Rev Barbara Steele-Perkins. “I wish I had the nerve to challenge any who say it to me,” she wrote. “Can you imagine a Good Friday sermon talking about Jesus, who ‘passed’ on the cross?”


 

Philip Roberts responded: “I am a retired funeral director, and this habit has annoyed me for some time. Many years ago, our company inscribed ‘fell asleep’, followed by a date, on coffin nameplates. On one occasion, someone remarked: ‘He isn’t dead, then.’ After that, we simply used the word ‘died’.”


 

Of course, not all euphemisms are equally bad. Some, as Chris Porter pointed out, are much worse than others: “I agree that ‘passed’ is dreadful. However, it remains preferable to ‘gone to Rose Cottage’ – a phrase used in hospitals in the 1970s.”

Some, according to David Raynes, might even be considered to have “a certain charm”. “Here in Somerset, one is told that the deceased has ‘gone on’.”


 

George S Pearson added: “The Norwegians describe those who have shuffled off as having ‘sovet stille ind i dag’: ‘slept in quietly today’.”


 

Finally, I enjoyed this from Nick Serpell: “When I was a BBC obituary editor, I made sure that my reflections on the deaths of the great and the good avoided any euphemisms. I do recall my shudder when coming across the deaths column in a Los Angeles newspaper headed ‘Passings’.

“A more robust approach was taken in the past. One 19th-century Cornish newspaper carried an account of the death of an elderly lady that ended with the line: ‘She fell from her chair, a corpse.’”

Which euphemisms annoy you most? Or do you feel moved to mount a defence? Send your responses here, and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of From the Editor PM, for which you can sign up here.

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

 

Puzzles

Panagram

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


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was DEVIATING. 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.

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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mercredi 11 février 2026

Counter-terror police investigate school stabbing

Europe’s doomed fighter jet dream | The 10 metros you must ride in your lifetime
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Wednesday, 11 February 2026

Issue No. 353

Good morning.

Counter-terror police are leading an investigation into a double stabbing at a school in north-west London. Two boys, aged 12 and 13, are in a serious condition after the “American-style” attack. Samuel Montgomery reports from the scene.

In more troubling news overnight, nine people have been killed in a school shooting in Canada by an assailant described as a “female in a dress”.

Elsewhere, Europe’s fighter jet project is in jeopardy and we reveal that Sir Keir Starmer was shown evidence of Lord Mandelson’s close friendship with Jeffrey Epstein in a Telegraph article published two years ago.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try four months of The Telegraph for £1, including all the articles in this newsletter. If you are already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

The lawyer fighting to save death row inmates from execution

The best apprenticeships in the UK for earning a high salary

Meghan’s confidant has written a novel so bad, AI would disown it

Free thinkers wanted.

Discuss and debate today’s biggest talking points, directly with our journalists.

Four months for £1.

 

Counter-terror police lead investigation into school stabbing

Police at Kingsbury High School in north-west London

Samuel Montgomery

Samuel Montgomery

News Reporter

 

The fear and panic was palpable in Brent last night as the community tried to make sense of a double stabbing at Kingsbury High School.

Londoners may have become numb to the knife crime epidemic in the capital but, as one parent told me: “It is really scary. We send our children to school and we expect them to be safe.”

A 13-year-old boy, thought to have been a suspended pupil from the school, is understood to have scaled a wall and made his way into a classroom and launched an attack on a 12 and 13-year-old.

Armed with a weapon, he stabbed two boys inside what is believed to be a science classroom, with terrified pupils seen banging on the windows and calling for help.

Simon Theodorou, a martial arts teacher who has a child at the school, said: “Apparently one of the two pupils saw what was going on and pulled the fire alarm to get help. That boy is a hero.”

Shailesh Sayta, a delivery driver who is a parent of a pupil at the school said his son had heard that someone “stabbed a boy in the neck with a fork and he was bleeding”.

“My son said a guy came out holding his neck with blood all over his white shirt,” he said.

The attacker then fled and the school was locked down as police helicopters whirred overhead and police cars arrived in droves outside the school gates.

Children, many in tears, were sent home without their bags, coats and jackets.

Officers tracked down the suspect and arrested him on suspicion of attempted murder, but the incident was quickly handed over to the counter-terror unit. Detectives said the attack had not been declared a terrorist incident, but that the step was taken because of the “surrounding circumstances”.

Last night, both injured boys were in a “serious” condition and receiving “urgent care”. We’ll bring you the latest developments from this troubling story today.
Read the full story here

 

Death of Europe’s fighter jet dream deepens Franco-German rift

James Rothwell

James Rothwell

Berlin Correspondent

 

With Nato in crisis, you would be forgiven for thinking that now is the time for Europe to stand together – with cool heads and determination. You would be wrong.

This week, an extraordinarily vicious row has broken out between France and Germany over their long-delayed, and now possibly doomed, fighter jet project.

In 2017, the Future Combat Aircraft System (FCAS) was hailed as the future of aircraft battles: it consisted not only of an advanced jet, but also a swarm of drones and a data “cloud” linking them together.

The Future Combat Air System, unveiled by France and Germany in 2017

However, over the past 10 years, huge differences between the French and German defence companies in charge of delivering the project have been exposed. These include the basic fundamentals, such as who can be trusted to build the jet and the purpose it would actually serve.

It is a serious blow to Europe’s defences at a time when – as General Sir Nick Carter, the former head of the British Armed Forces, has warned – the Continent needs to become a military superpower.

To underline his sense of urgency, he said that Europe’s slowness to respond to global threats was “no longer merely inefficient, it is dangerous”.

He may well have been thinking of the FCAS when he uttered those gloomy remarks. Now Emmanuel Macron, the French president, has been forced to defend the project – but perhaps not even he has the political will to salvage it.
Read the full story here

Europe ‘must become military superpower’ to survive without US

The fallen King of Davos has a plan to save Europe from Trump

 

Opinion

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard Headshot

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

The Starmer palace coup is a national disgrace

The destructive fools of Westminster are needlessly pushing Britain towards a gilts and sterling crisis

Continue reading

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

Allison Pearson

Anyone who thinks Rayner is the answer to Britain’s problems needs their head examined

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Gareth Roberts</span> Headshot

Gareth Roberts

Sorry Keir, giving in before a fight isn’t the same as winning

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Flooding in Somerset, which has experienced 40 consecutive days of rain

Your essential reads

Elizabeth Vartkessian: ‘Each case I work on could be described as a life that’s fallen through a crack’

The lawyer fighting to save death row inmates from execution

Elizabeth Vartkessian’s clients are some of the most evil people on Earth. She is not trying to prove their innocence – “the murders my clients committed were often brutal, extreme and irrational”, she admits.

So why does she take their cases? As a mitigation specialist, her job is to collect evidence to prevent people from being sentenced to death, or to get their sentences commuted to life without parole. Her reason: “Why are we so desperate to kill people? It’s grotesque to me that this is how people spend their time, energy and money.” Could this specialist skill be a revolution for death row? Jessamy Calkin meets with the lawyer.

Continue reading

 

‘We are junior doctors and refusing to strike. The Left-wing BMA has lost the plot’

On the face of it, the British Medical Association vote last week was conclusive – 93 per cent in favour of further industrial action by junior doctors. Crucially, though, the turnout was only 52 per cent. Here, two dissenting voices explain why they won’t be joining the picket line and are calling for the union to compromise.

Continue reading

 

Michael Crawford, who played Frank Spencer in Some Mothers Do ‘Ave ‘Em, helped choreograph Torvill and Dean’s Bolero

Frank Spencer became Torvill and Dean’s secret weapon in Bolero glory

As Britain misses a Winter Olympics medal yet again, cast your mind back 42 years to Torvill and Dean’s Bolero routine. Behind its success was the decision by the ice skaters to hire a theatrical consultant. Their choice was surprising: Michael Crawford, best known in Britain as the comedy wimp Frank Spencer. This is the story of an unlikely – and brilliant – collaboration.

Continue reading

 

The best apprenticeships in the UK for earning a high salary

As university graduates battle ballooning student debt and a difficult jobs market, apprenticeships look ever more appealing. Not only can you finish a placement without owing money, you’ll also get paid while you learn – and there can be promising earning opportunities. Try our tool to see which apprenticeships can lead to the highest-paying jobs.

Continue reading

 

Grey skies hang over Aberdeen’s city centre

‘I haven’t seen the sun since January’: Life beneath Aberdeen’s record-breaking gloom

For many in Aberdeen, there is an irony to strolling down Sunnyside Road. The city hasn’t seen a single ray of sunshine since January 21, prompting desperate locals to book tanning salons and Caribbean cruises. On the waterlogged links, golfers are resorting to neon-yellow hi-vis balls to combat the darkness. A freak meteorological quirk has turned the Silver City into a land of perpetual grey.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

The 10 metros you must ride in your lifetime

Elektrozavodskaya station, a classic symbol of the Moscow Metro

They may be functional chunks of transport infrastructure, but metro networks also give you a revealing glimpse of the city you are visiting. We’ve chosen 10 systems that are the stuff of travel dreams, from Stockholm, where the bedrock has been left on show with dramatic effect, to Tokyo, known for its white-gloved railway staff who prod commuters through half-closed doors.

How many have you ridden? Read the full list

Below are two more helpful articles for you this morning:

 

Critic’s corner

Meghan’s confidant has written a novel so bad, AI would disown it
★☆☆☆☆

Jessa Crispin

Jessa Crispin

 

Omid Scobie is best known for his controversial book Endgame, a 2022 “exposé” of Royal family in-fighting that seemed astonishingly sympathetic to Team Sussex (he happens to be a confidant of the Duchess).

Now he has turned to fiction with a rom-com called Royal Spin, co-written with Robin Benway, a writer who specialises in novels for young adults. It revolves around a loveable but clumsy American woman (is there any other fictional kind?) who relocates to London to work at Buckingham Palace as a communications director and, in the process, teaches those stuffy British aristocrats about love – and diversity.

So, can Scobie write? Absolutely not. His novel reminded me of sitting in a dentist’s waiting room, forced to watch a reality television show in which people with too much cosmetic surgery sell luxury goods to the gullible. The publishing industry seems afraid that AI innovation will tear its heart out. If this is what passes for that heart, bring on the robots.
Read the full review here

 

Your say

Little rascals

In our Devil’s Advocate column on Sunday, Shauna Brown questioned the acceptance of children in all public spaces. Today, she’s standing in for Orlando Bird to pull out the best of your opinions and stories.

Shauna writes...
Thank you to everyone who responded to my column. I was prepared to be vilified as one of those childless cat ladies, so I was pleasantly surprised that many of you agreed with me.


 

It seems a number of readers have also fallen victim to restless little legs in the air. DS said: “I had a three-year-old start kicking the back of my seat on a plane, and that’s before we’d taken off. I politely asked them to stop and the father told me: ‘He’s only three.’

“Fortunately the mother took him onto her lap and stopped it. My parents didn’t impose me on strangers until I was old enough to know better, but then that was the 1950s when people knew how to behave!”


 

They’re not only attacking from behind, as John Hyslop discovered after giving his window seat to a first-time flyer. “He spent four hours looking out of the window while I spent four hours having his wife apologise for his young son climbing all over me to get to his dad. Never again – I always book the aisle seat now.”


 

While I disagree with little ones in galleries, Mary Birch shared a lovely anecdote about taking three children to an exhibition of French 19th-century painting. “While we were looking at a landscape, a Frenchman came over, asked if he could speak to the children, and explained that he lived where the picture had been painted. Are the French more tolerant or their children generally better behaved?”


 

I think the simple answer is that French children are not really children. They are small adults with better table manners and more sophisticated palates than most British adults. Isabel Wood was also impressed with les enfants en France: “Oh, how I agree! Anyone who has seen well-behaved children in a French restaurant, eating oysters or moules expertly, will agree, too.”


 

Of all the responses, Roy Terry put it best. “Modern parents refuse to behave as parents but insist on dragging their offspring with them, whilst continuing to behave like childless adults. This is the same culture which causes parents to take their children out of school for holidays.”

I couldn’t have said it better myself, Roy. Send your responses here, and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of From the Editor PM, for which you can sign up here.

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

 

Puzzles

Panagram

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


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was NORTHWARD. 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.

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.