vendredi 17 juillet 2026

Burnham’s diplomatic vacuum

‘As a Jewish student, I’m being persecuted’ | The celebrities who prove you can’t buy class (or manners)
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Friday, 17 July 2026

Issue No. 509

Good morning.

Andy Burnham will deliver a speech today at a special conference where he will be crowned Labour leader. Ahead of his coronation, there is still so much we don’t know about what he will do as prime minister. In the delicate world of diplomacy, where every word and signal is pored over, foreign diplomats don’t much like what little they’ve heard and seen so far, David Blair, our Chief Foreign Affairs Commentator, reveals.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Don’t miss this season’s hottest offer. Try a whole year of The Telegraph for £19 – only in our Summer Sale. If you’re already a subscriber make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

‘As a Jewish student at King’s College London, I’m being persecuted’

The A-list celebrities who prove you can’t buy class (or manners)

Plus, ‘I lost 2st without giving up pizza, chocolate or alcohol’

Summer Sale: One year for just £19

Think outside your inbox. Unlock full access to our free-thinking journalism, plus thousands of fun puzzles.

 

‘Burnham has become a global laughing stock before even entering No 10’

Andy Burnham claims Britain has got it wrong on the war in Gaza

David Blair

David Blair

Chief Foreign Affairs Commentator

 

Picture the scene. Israel’s security cabinet is meeting in a bunker deep beneath the defence ministry in Tel Aviv. An official rushes in bearing a message. Benjamin Netanyahu’s face drops as he reads the news: the British Labour Party has just called for a ceasefire in Gaza. “This changes everything,” he exclaims. “Cancel the campaign immediately!”

Listening to Andy Burnham’s pronouncements on foreign policy makes you wonder whether he might somehow believe in this daydream.

“Let’s be honest,” said our incoming prime minister in a video message. “Britain was too slow to call for a ceasefire [in Gaza] and we must do more to strengthen our approach.”

Suppose Britain had urged a ceasefire any earlier. Would Israel or Hamas have known or cared? Burnham might have felt better, but nothing would have changed in Gaza.

Embassies across London will now be poring over Burnham’s words and sending telegrams home on what his premiership might mean for British foreign policy. He has given them every reason to suspect that he regards diplomacy, certainly in the Middle East, as nothing but an elaborate exercise in placating rival factions of the Labour Party.

Will Burnham even be prepared to devote enough time to foreign policy? How will he combine meeting other leaders and attending summits with commuting from Manchester Piccadilly to London Euston?

So far, Burnham’s clumsy signals risk squandering his influence before he has even taken office.

This essay is available only to subscribers.
Continue reading

See more of our coverage below:

IMF warns Burnham against higher public spending

What Chancellor Mahmood would mean for Britain

Burnham: I put milk in first when making tea

 

Opinion

Tom Sharpe Headshot

Tom Sharpe

Argentina’s lies about the Royal Navy’s Magellan transit are pathetic

HMS Medway’s passage was entirely lawful, with notice given on time

Continue reading

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

Eleanor Mills

My older friends no longer feel safe living alone in the countryside

Continue reading

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

Tom Harris

Burnham’s embrace of Palestine is as pointless as it is cynical

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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Headlines

World cup diary

England players stunned by Tuchel’s tactics

Some of England’s players were said to be surprised that Thomas Tuchel did not try to attack Argentina more after going ahead

Thomas Tuchel is facing a tidal wave of criticism for England’s semi-final surrender against Argentina, and The Telegraph can reveal that his own players were shocked by his tactics. The manager has come under fire for throwing on three defenders when his side was leading, before Argentina scored twice late on to win 2-1.

However, he has privately rejected accusations that he encouraged his England team to try to hang on in the semi-final. Telegraph Sport understands that Tuchel’s message to his England substitutes was to “play higher”.
England players stunned by Tuchel tactics

Manager privately rejects claims he told England to hang on

 

Essential reads

Tali Smus has felt isolated at King’s College London

‘As a Jewish student at King’s College London, I’m being persecuted for my beliefs’

When I started my English degree at King’s College London nearly two years ago, writes Tali Smus, I was hugely excited. It was on my first day, Sept 24, 2024, that I learned my lesson: being Jewish is fine, as long as you stand on the “right side of history”. In my class’s online group chat, discussion quickly turned to the need to “educate the Zionists”. From there, everything snowballed.

For subscribers only

 

Jennifer Lopez has been branded ‘inappropriate’ and ‘inconsiderate’ for wearing a 17-inch-wide hat to Wimbledon

The A-list celebrities who prove you can’t buy class (or manners)

Unlike the untouchable Hollywood stars of old, modern A-listers love pretending to be down-to-earth. Yet behind their self-promotional “relatability” lies a pattern of diva behaviour that is driving us mere mortals mad. From Jennifer Lopez’s “inconsiderate” Wimbledon outfit to Taylor Swift’s “tacky” Manhattan wedding, here are some of today’s worst offenders...

Continue reading

 

Rachel Hosie lost 14kg after swapping fad diets for sustainable eating habits

‘I lost 2st in six months without giving up pizza, chocolate or alcohol’

I was living my dream as a lifestyle journalist, writes Rachel Hosie, and yet, when it came to my body image, I was miserable. At 13st and in the overweight category, I knew I needed to change. Here’s how I lost the weight without giving up my beloved pizza and cocktails.

Continue reading

 

How Amnesty International lost its way

When Amnesty International was founded in 1961, its mission was simple: protecting prisoners of conscience. Today, the charity faces accusations that it has abandoned its principles, from blacklisting feminist groups to suspending its own Israeli branch. For Iseult White, granddaughter of the organisation’s co-founder, its actions have silenced ordinary people and exposed how the Nobel Peace Prize-winning giant lost its way.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

Copenhagen vs Stockholm: Which is the better city break?

Copenhagen and Stockholm

Both Scandinavian capitals offer stunning architecture, including Copenhagen’s Nyhavn and Stockholm’s Gamla Stan

Neither of these Scandinavian capitals is short on city-break appeal, but which has the edge: pint-sized Copenhagen with its hip cafés, markets, Michelin stars and cobbled streets, or sprawling Stockholm with its stately department stores, open-air museums and scattering of islands? Our expert dives in to declare a winner once and for all.

Continue reading

Here is another article you may find helpful this morning:

 

Reviews of the week

This My Fair Lady revival is absolutely loverly

Designer Peter McKintosh presents a fantasy London of bowler-hatted gentlemen, cheerful flower girls and warmly glowing lamp posts

Theatre

My Fair Lady

★★★★★

My Fair Lady is both a safe choice and, these days, a risky one. Its foolproof score distracts from a fundamentally grim tale of class snobbery, poverty and social engineering, in which a phonetics professor turns a flower girl into an English lady for a bet. Its contrived fairy-tale ending can send contemporary directors into a spin. Yet this wonderful revival needs no radical reimagining to cast its magic. Just Lerner and Loewe’s original score and text, simply and vivaciously delivered.
Read Claire Allfree’s full review

Books

The Showgirl and the Prince

★★★★☆

It was, aptly, on Valentine’s Day 1988 that actress Ruthie Henshall, then making her West End debut as a slinky feline in Andrew Lloyd Webber’s musical Cats, met her future paramour, Prince Edward. “I was pleasantly surprised by how attractive I found him, although it wasn’t an overwhelming feeling of phwoar,” she recounts in her new book. The word “phwoar” alone tells us that we’re in for a rollicking good time: this is royal memoir by way of Jilly Cooper.
Read Marianka Swain’s full review

Television

Ride or Die

★★★★☆

“My name is Whiptail and I kill people for a living,” announces Hannah Waddingham in the opening minutes of this entertaining action caper. We’ve already gathered that because we’ve just seen her assassinate a Russian oligarch in an Austrian ski resort. It’s going to come as shocking news to her best friend. So begins a romp that melds a contract killer thriller with a buddy comedy. Waddingham is in full James Bond mode as the most glamorous hit woman in town.
Read Anita Singh’s full review

Plus, read Robbie Collin’s review of The Odyssey, which he calls his film of the year: “Christopher Nolan has turned one of the great legends of Western civilisation into a blockbuster for the ages.”
Read it here

 

Your say

Fashion faux pas

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

Kate writes...
One of the great banes of my teenage years was skinny jeans. They might well be glamorous on Kate Moss, but for the rest of us, they had a tendency to make legs look as though they had been wrapped in clingfilm. In theory, then, I should be fully on board with the latest trend for wide-legged trousers. However, Sophia Money-Coutts offered a cautionary tale about their associated hazards after a crashing fall in a restaurant.


 

As if that wasn’t enough to put me off, readers soon chimed in with their own eye-watering tales. “I am just three weeks out from surgery to repair my left wrist which shattered so badly that my hand actually turned in the opposite direction,” wrote Carly Ackerman. “I tripped on the hem of a pair of wide-leg silk trousers while crossing the street.”

Ouch.


 

Soon, others were reminiscing about the last time wide trousers were in vogue. “In 1976, at the age of eight, I was dancing an English folk dance with Helen Scott in our school summer festival,” wrote Tim Wright. “Unfortunately, I caught my right foot in my grey Prince of Wales check flares and brought us both to the ground. I wasn’t allowed a pair of long trousers for another three years.”


 

A few of our female readers have mastered the art successfully. “You have to treat them like a full-length skirt on stairs and practise walking in them,” said Jill Ross.


 

“The trick to not tripping up is to get them tailored to the right length for you and avoid wearing them with heels,” added Viki Rhodes Bradford. “I always wear mine with flats and I’ve yet to trip up after years of wearing this style.”


 

I applaud these ladies’ fashion nous. Nonetheless, it was Peter Barnett’s example that left the deepest impression. “I recall driving my Mini in the 1970s and finding that, inexplicably, I could not operate the brake pedal.

“I had shut my wide trousers in the door.”

Does style trump safety in your book? Let us know here, and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of this newsletter.

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

 

On this day

1917 | George V changes the name of the Royal family from the German-sounding title Saxe-Coburg-Gotha to Windsor (seen below on page four of the following day’s paper)

1936 | Spanish generals Francisco Franco and Emilio Mola launch an uprising, starting the Spanish Civil War

1979 | Sebastian Coe sets world record with 3:49 mile in Oslo

1998 | The Mask of Zorro is released

Birthdays: Angela Merkel (72), David Hasselhoff (74), Queen Camilla (79)

Telegraph front page

Plus, in the news today, the England rugby squad have been forced to change hotels in Buenos Aires to avoid disruption from World Cup celebrations. What time were they kept up until?

Argentina fans took to the streets in Buenos Aires to celebrate their win over England

1. 5am
2. 4am
3. 1am

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

 

Puzzles

The Telegraph has released a range of bite-sized puzzles perfect for a two-minute mental workout on the go. To celebrate, we are bringing you a different one each day this week. Today, try our Mini Panagram.

Plus, see the answer for yesterday’s Mini Cryptic Crossword below:

P.S. If you’re missing the Panagram, rest assured it will return next week, and in the meantime you can play today’s here.

 

Please let me know what you think of this newsletter. You can email me your feedback at fromtheeditor@telegraph.co.uk.

Thank you for reading. Have a fulfilling day and I hope to see you tomorrow.

Chris Evans, Editor

Summer Sale: One year for just £19

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jeudi 16 juillet 2026

It’s the hope that kills you

The ‘coolest girl in college’ behind Burnham’s rise | Robbie Collin reviews The Odyssey
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Thursday, 16 July 2026

Issue No. 508

Good morning.

The hurt goes on for England. Another loss in the latter stages of a major tournament, and the feeling is depressingly familiar. The talking points are endless: the fiery build-up which made way for a fiery encounter, Argentina’s dirty tricks, Thomas Tuchel’s questionable tactics after taking the lead, the Argentines’ political celebrations and ugly scenes on the pitch at the full-time whistle. Oliver Brown, our Chief Sports Writer, was in Atlanta to witness it all. In the end, with England coming so close, it’s the hope that kills you.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Don’t miss this season’s hottest offer. Try a whole year of The Telegraph for £19 – only in our Summer Sale. If you’re already a subscriber make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

The ‘coolest girl in college’ behind Andy Burnham’s rise

Robbie Collin gives The Odyssey five stars

Plus, two minutes of puzzling a day can boost brain health

Summer Sale: One year for just £19

Think outside your inbox. Unlock full access to our free-thinking journalism, plus thousands of fun puzzles.

 

World cup diary

It’s the hope that kills you

A despondent Jude Bellingham after England’s defeat

Oliver Brown

Oliver Brown

Chief Sports Writer at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta

 

This was an ending to haunt England’s worst nightmares. Five minutes from beating Argentina and reaching a first World Cup final since 1966, they threw it all away, taken apart once more by the first truly world-class opponents they confronted.

Ultimately, the blame rested with Thomas Tuchel. He was meant to be the man to take the national team to the next frontier, but on a truly shattering night here in Atlanta, he committed the same mistake as his predecessor, desperately protecting a lead rather than truly chasing glory. It proved to be a fateful error, enabling the defending champions to score twice at the death and prolong English anguish for at least another four years.

No sooner were England ahead through Anthony Gordon’s goal than they sat deep, substituted strikers for central defenders and invited all the Argentinian pressure on to them. You might be able to sustain that for two minutes, but not for 20. You might find that the approach works against Mexico, but not against Lionel Messi. It is their fatal flaw, this tendency to retreat into their shells just as the ultimate prize beckons.

Just as when playing against Croatia in the 2018 World Cup semi-final, and against Italy in the Euro 2020 final, England paid the price, as Enzo Fernandez and then Lautaro Martinez stole it at the death to send Argentina to a second straight final against Spain on Sunday.

At the full-time whistle, tempers frayed. Jude Bellingham slapped Argentinian substitute Valentin Barco on the head, which sparked an on-field fracas.

Jude Bellingham slaps Valentin Barco

Jude Bellingham slaps Valentin Barco at the end of the match

Then, adding to the political build-up to the match, Argentinian players celebrated by unfurling a banner that read: “The Malvinas are Argentine.”

Players celebrate with ‘The Malvinas are Argentine’ banner

For England, the inquest will rumble on far beyond this tournament. While Tuchel will in all likelihood keep his job for a European Championship on home soil in 2028, this result, plucking defeat from the jaws of a potentially monumental victory, threatens to lodge itself deep in the national psyche.
Read the match report here

See our full coverage below:

Jamie Carragher: Tuchel blew England’s big chance

Watch: Bellingham slaps Argentina substitute at full time

All 31 dirty tricks Argentina unleashed on England

‘The Malvinas are Argentine’: Players celebrate with banner

Micah Richards learnt of father’s death moments before match

 

Opinion

Robert Tombs Headshot

Robert Tombs

Britain needs an establishment but not this rotten, unpatriotic lot

Too many politicians and civil servants appear to put other priorities ahead of the national interest

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Ella Whelan</span> Headshot

Ella Whelan

The hypocritical Green Party is full of hot air

Continue reading

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

Tom Sharpe

Iranian missiles are defeating US soft-kill defences using Chinese guidance

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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Headlines

Your essential reads

Burnham met his wife at the University of Cambridge

The ‘coolest girl in college’ behind Andy Burnham’s rise

Behind the rise of Andy Burnham lies his most enigmatic asset: his wife, Marie-France van Heel. Once called “the coolest girl in college” when they bonded over The Smiths, she has spent decades shielding her privacy. Yet from throwing cushions on Blind Date to faxing his disputed expenses, her influence is quietly woven through his political career.
Continue reading

Mahmood front-runner to be next chancellor

Burnham admits he is considering raising taxes

 

The Odyssey, review: an astonishing reimagining that gets to the soul of the story ★★★★★

Matt Damon and Zendaya in The Odyssey

Matt Damon is tremendous as Odysseus, alongside Zendaya as Athena, a goddess reduced to a ghost

Robbie Collin’s verdict is in. The most anticipated film of the year, Sir Christopher Nolan’s adaptation of one of the oldest stories in literature, also turns out to be the best so far by some distance. Featuring a tremendous Matt Damon as Odysseus, perfectly deployed supporting players and a terrifying Cyclops, The Odyssey is an unhinged, trailblazing blockbuster that demands to be seen on the biggest screen you can find.

For subscribers only

 

Spaniards celebrate Gibraltar opening its gates

My chaotic journey through Gibraltar’s new ‘Schengen shack’ border

Gibraltar has entered a new era. The border with Spain has been rendered invisible by the Rock’s Brexit deal. It’s undoubtedly a historic moment after decades of tensions and a siege mentality on the British Overseas Territory that has lasted three centuries. At the same time as cranes lifted iron gates from the frontier, new controls were imposed on Britons flying into Gibraltar’s airport. James Crisp, our Europe Editor, flew in on the first day and discovered... chaos.

Continue reading

 

The energy bill overhaul threatening to give taxpayers an electric shock

Andy Burnham has pledged to reduce the cost of life’s essentials by cutting household energy bills, with allied think tanks proposing a “rising block tariff”, giving every family a cheap, subsidised allowance of gas and electricity. While middle-income households could save £225 a year, this radical overhaul carries a stinging £7bn price tag. Szu Chan, our Economics Editor, reports.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

Just two minutes of puzzling a day can boost your brain health

You may have noticed we’ve swapped out the regular Panagram for a series of mini quizzes in this newsletter (but don’t fret, Panagram will return on Monday). These bite-sized versions of our puzzles only take one to two minutes, and evidence suggests that puzzling regularly – even for that short amount of time – can strengthen memory, build resilience against cognitive decline and even help keep the brain younger for longer. David Cox explores the neuroscience behind the habit and why novelty matters.

Continue reading

Here is another helpful article to read this morning:

 

From the comment desk

‘I reviewed the Army’s new Boxer and it stopped me in my tracks’

Hamish de Bretton-Gordon

Hamish de Bretton-Gordon

 

The holy trinity of armoured warfare has remained unchanged since tanks first dominated the battlefield at Cambrai in 1917: firepower, protection and mobility. Every successful armoured vehicle is judged by how well it balances these three essential qualities.

Today, Britain has a new ABC of armoured capability: Ajax, Boxer and Challenger 3. Having already put Ajax and Challenger 3 through their paces, it was Boxer’s turn for a Jeremy Clarkson-style review.

Hamish de Bretton-Gordon rides in the Boxer at Millbrook

I confess, I approached Boxer with some scepticism. Like many armoured soldiers of my generation, I have long believed that serious military mobility demands tracks. After spending time putting Boxer through its paces at Millbrook, I am prepared to revise that opinion. Boxer may well be the exception that proves the rule.

There are other things I liked. For perhaps the first time in decades, the British Army has acquired an armoured vehicle that genuinely feels overpowered rather than underpowered.

Performance is only part of the story. Boxer’s strategic mobility is equally impressive, but its greatest strength may be its versatility. Its modular design allows different mission modules to be swapped on to the common chassis in about 40 minutes.

This column is available only to subscribers.
Continue reading

 

Your say

Green fingers

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...
The recent weather has been wreaking havoc in gardens across the country, and in many different ways. It didn’t take long, for instance, for my lovingly tended sage to transform into something resembling pork scratchings.

Over in Dorset, Andrew Read reported a different problem: “My runner and climbing flat beans have had lots of flowers, but few beans have developed. There appears to be a lack of bees and other pollinators. Is the scorching heat responsible for this dearth?”


 

It wasn’t just Dorset. Jane Davidson, writing from Nottinghamshire, lamented that “I, too, am yet to greet my friends with the usual: ‘Have you had a boiling yet?’”


 

Helen Chambers, in Hereford, could account for the bees: “I think they are all in my garden enjoying the lavender.”


 

Sheila Watson, meanwhile, implicated a non-meteorological culprit: “When our beans failed, friends suggested that the problem was sparrows taking the blossoms. We moved the beans away from hedges and they thrived.”

How are your plants faring this summer? Send your responses (and tips) here, and the pick of the crop 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

1661 | Europe’s first banknotes are issued by the Bank of Stockholm

1969 | Apollo 11 launches, carrying the first astronauts to the moon (and our front page the following day can be seen below)

1999 | John F Kennedy Jr is killed in a plane crash alongside his wife, Carolyn Bessette, and sister-in-law

Birthdays: Gareth Bale (37), Will Ferrell (59), Michael Flatley (68)

Telegraph front page

Plus, in the news today, Dua Lipa has thrown her weight behind protesters opposing a Trump family-backed £1.3bn luxury resort on a protected Albanian island. What is the protest called?

Dua Lipa was born in London in 1995 to Kosovan-Albanian parents, who fled the conflict in the Balkans

1. The Toucan Revolution
2. The Hummingbird Revolution
3. The Flamingo Revolution

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

 

Puzzles

The Telegraph has released a range of bite-sized puzzles perfect for a two-minute mental workout on the go. To celebrate, we are bringing you a different one each day this week. Today, try our Mini Cryptic Crossword.

Plus, see the answer for yesterday’s Mini Sudoku below:

P.S. If you’re missing the Panagram, rest assured it will return next week, and in the meantime you can play today’s here.

 


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 at fromtheeditor@telegraph.co.uk.

Summer Sale: One year for just £19

Think outside your inbox. Unlock full access to our free-thinking journalism, plus thousands of fun puzzles.

 

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