vendredi 3 juillet 2026

Change law to kick out Rochdale rapist, No 10 urged

NHS to give shopping vouchers for walking | Taylor Swift by those who know her best
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Friday, 3 July 2026

Issue No. 495

Good morning.

Labour is under mounting pressure to change immigration laws after a loophole allowed child rapist Shabir Ahmed to avoid deportation. Last night, MPs urged the Government to take action and send the Rochdale grooming gang ringleader back to Pakistan, where he was born. Except that senior Pakistani government sources have told The Telegraph that Ahmed will not be allowed back into their country even if the law is changed. Charles Hymas, our Home Affairs Editor, reports on what could become Andy Burnham’s first diplomatic nightmare.

Elsewhere, the NHS will give discounts and shopping vouchers to people who walk 20 minutes a day under new plans to “get Britain moving”. Laura Donnelly, our Health Editor, reports.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. We’re giving email readers four months of The Telegraph for just 25p per month. If you’re already a subscriber make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

The grammar school rat race has left the white working class behind

Taylor Swift by those who know her best

Plus, 13 expert-tested products to help you survive the next heatwave

All Access: Just 25p per month

Enjoy free-thinking journalism, daily puzzles and more with your email-exclusive offer.

 

Change law to kick out Rochdale rapist, No 10 urged

Shabir Ahmed, 73, was found guilty of 30 child rape charges but cannot be deported

Charles Hymas

Charles Hymas

Home Affairs Editor

 

Labour is facing mounting pressure to change immigration laws immediately so that a child rapist freed from jail can be deported.

Shabir Ahmed, 73, was freed from prison yesterday morning after serving for 14 years for 30 child rape offences as part of the nine-man Rochdale grooming gang.

Britain cannot deport him despite having stripped him of his British citizenship. This is because of protections granted to Commonwealth immigrants such as Ahmed under the Immigration Act 1971.

A taxi reportedly carrying Ahmed (not seen) left HMP Leeds yesterday

It is understood that Shabana Mahmood, the Home Secretary, is considering closing the loophole in the act in order to enable Britain to remove him.

Last night, MPs urged the Government to take action, as the Tories pledged to table an amendment in the House of Commons to “get this man out for good”.

The amendment to Mahmood’s immigration bill will propose rewriting the 1971 act to permit the removal of serious criminals such as Ahmed.

However, even if the Home Secretary amends the legislation, two senior officials from the Pakistani government have told The Telegraph that the country will not accept Ahmed back because they claim he renounced his Pakistani citizenship “several decades ago”.

Britain disputes the claim that he is no longer a Pakistani citizen, setting up the first diplomatic row for Andy Burnham, the expected incoming prime minister.

He tweeted on Wednesday that he wanted “this vile criminal out of the country” and for ministers to “review all possible options”, with “nothing off the table”.

This report is available only to subscribers.
Continue reading

Katie Lam: Deporting Shabir Ahmed is a test of whether Britain is a serious country

 

NHS to give shopping vouchers to people who walk 20 minutes a day

Laura Donnelly

Laura Donnelly

Health Editor

 

Health chiefs are drawing up plans to reward people with shopping vouchers and discounts for boosting their daily walking, under a nationwide campaign to create “the world’s largest marathon”.

In an interview with The Telegraph, Sir Brendan Foster, the Olympic medallist, reveals how millions of people will be encouraged to walk 20 minutes a day – the equivalent of walking a marathon each month – with rewards ranging from digital badges to shopping vouchers and free coffees.

The obvious question is why anyone should need a shopping voucher or a virtual medal to go for a walk. Foster’s answer may surprise you: he says it lies in evolution.
Read the full story here

 

Opinion

Daniel Johnson Headshot

Daniel Johnson

Mass immigration has turned the European dream into a nightmare

How can Schengen survive both the rise of nationalist politics and open borders policies in countries like Spain?

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Sherelle Jacobs</span> Headshot

Sherelle Jacobs

The depressed Northern town that shatters Burnham’s grand vision for Britain

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Sketch by Patrick Kidd</span> Headshot

Sketch by Patrick Kidd

Departing ‘head’ Starmer and prefects schooled by bullies

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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Headlines

Summer of sport

Fery is fit for a princess and ‘snicko’ saves Ronaldo

The Princess of Wales and Tim Henman watch Arthur Fery in action

Jeremy Wilson

Jeremy Wilson

Chief Sports Reporter

 

Arthur Fery is the last British player standing at Wimbledon after only four days and two rounds of competition. With the Princess of Wales looking on, Fery ensured that Britain avoided the embarrassment of not having a single remaining player in the third round of either the men’s or women’s draw for the first time in almost 20 years. After losing the first set, Fery rallied to sweep past Finn Otto Virtanen before admitting that he was unaware that the Princess was present on Court 18. She had been joined by Tim Henman, a player who knows more than most about carrying Britain’s fading Wimbledon hopes.
At last, British fans have a player to get behind... while the Princess of Wales surprises fans in Wimbledon queue

Sam Dean

Sam Dean

Football Reporter

 

When Portugal met Croatia in the World Cup round of 32 in Toronto, all eyes were on the two fortysomethings: Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo and Croatia’s Luka Modric. As it turned out, though, the true star of the show was a piece of technology that was seemingly inspired by cricket.

Igor Matanovic made the slightest contact with the ball

Football’s answer to “snickometer”, which determines when the slightest contact is made with the ball, had its most dramatic ever moment as it ruled out an equaliser for Croatia in the 13th minute of stoppage time.
‘Snicko’ drama and Croatia fury as Ronaldo’s Portugal win chaotic clash

Elsewhere, two dominant performances saw Spain and Switzerland cruise into the last 16 overnight. After an ominous show of supremacy, with two goals from Mikel Oyarzabal and another from Pedro Porro, we have analysed five reasons why Spain may present the biggest threat to France.
Continue reading

 

Essential reads

The grammar school rat race has left the white working class behind

At a school in Barnet, the white British Year 7 intake has plummeted from nine pupils to just two. In Hampstead, another welcomed a single white British pupil in 2024. A relentless, £15,000 tutoring arms race is transforming grammar admissions, with children undergoing “Olympic” training and poorer local families priced out of a system designed to aid social mobility.

For subscribers only

 

J.K. Simmons cut his teeth on stage and the small screen and, after decades of being ‘that guy in that thing’, the Whiplash star became a household name

J.K. Simmons: ‘It would have been a disaster if I’d become famous when I was young’

With his deep voice, craggy features and air of command, J.K. Simmons is one of the most familiar actors of his generation, writes Ed Cumming. Today, he has more than 200 credits to his name, but he took a slow route to the Hollywood A-list. I met him in Manhattan to discuss his latest role, playing an Irish gang leader in 1980s New York. In person, Simmons has all the gravitas he brings to his performances, with a wry sense of humour. As with other late bloomers, he has a rare level of perspective on the good, the bad and the ugly of the industry. 

Continue reading

 

The stumbling blocks in Burnham’s devolution drive

Andy Burnham, the presumptive next prime minister, has made the case for moving power out of Westminster and into the regions. This, he argues, will help unlock growth and solve problems such as youth unemployment and a spiralling benefits bill. Regional politicians who understand local circumstances will be able to make the best decisions for their areas. Yet nobody voted for this. In fact, as Eir Nolsøe and Emma Taggart report, voters have explicitly rejected this path in the past.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

The best crime novels to read this summer

My requirements for a holiday thriller, writes Jake Kerridge, are a page-turning readability, and a zinging wit that will cut through summer sluggishness.

Thus, I’ve often packed Chris Brookmyre over the past three decades. In Quite Ugly One Evening, a 30th-anniversary sequel to his debut Quite Ugly One Morning, he turns his gift for savage invective on to the culture wars, while also providing a classic locked-room mystery set aboard a cruise ship.

Alongside this warhorse of crime-as-satire, young buck Andrew Hunter Murray showcases a similar gift for combining thrills and jokes in Bad Deeds, about a burglar’s unsuccessful attempt to go straight. Hunter Murray looks set to join Brookmyre as one of my suitcase staples.

Read our full list of summer thrillers

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

  • Just over the heatwave? Guess what, there’s another one coming next week and it could get even hotter. Air conditioning units sold out across the country, including all the ones we had our experts test. When we can bring you more air con options, we will. For now, from fans to BBQs, here’s all you’ll need to keep sane and, crucially, they’re all still in stock. For now...
 

Reviews of the week

Madonna throws a sweaty dance party to reclaim her crown

Madonna

Confessions II is Madonna’s 15th studio album and her first release in seven years

Album

Confessions II by Madonna

★★★★☆

Madonna has thrown a dance party, with herself as guest of honour. Everyone is invited. As the title implies, Confessions II is the sequel to her most successful album of this century, Confessions on a Dance Floor. The key question for her 15th studio album (her first in seven years) is: can Madonna retake her crown as pop’s dancing queen and deliver the kind of blockbuster entertainment that will put young pretenders to the sword?
Read Neil McCormick’s full review

Film

Minions & Monsters

★★★★★

While the Minions themselves might be almost impossible to tell apart, their franchise is one of a kind: it is the only one around that keeps getting better. It would be tempting to describe this deliriously animated, unreasonably funny seventh dispatch from the world of Despicable Me as the jabbering little nuisances’ Citizen Kane. Except the film itself – a frenzied comic adventure in which the Minions take on early Hollywood (and, eventually, some monsters) – gets there first.
Read Robbie Collin’s full review

Television

Human Vapor

★☆☆☆☆

When presented with a TV show called Human Vapor, I was looking forward to a pop-science documentary about farts. This proves that I am both puerile and ignorant: Human Vapor is in fact a classic Japanese 1960 science-fiction B-movie about a man who turns to gas. This series is Netflix’s 21st-century reboot and it’s just as silly as it sounds. The only flatulence involved is of the narrative variety.
Read Benji Wilson’s full review

 

Your say

All court up

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...
If you suspect that watching England in the World Cup is shaving several years off your life expectancy each time – well, there’s always Wimbledon. I have never been much of a tennis fan, but can see the appeal of Pimm’s and strawberries over lager and dread.


 

In contrast with the World Cup’s crucible of chaos, Wimbledon offers something a little more serene, according to Barbara Jackson. “It has been such a pleasure to watch so far,” she wrote in a letter. “The courts are immaculate and the players look very smart in their whites. As a tournament, it really stands out.”


 

Not everyone has been so enthusiastic, though. For Diana Gibbons, any possible serenity was compromised by a persistent irritant: “Do the BBC’s Wimbledon commentators get paid by the word? We would love to be able to watch the matches as if we were there as spectators. However, that is impossible because of the constant prattle. When will they realise that the chatter is unnecessary? Oh, for the days of Dan Maskell.”


 

Anne Jappie agreed, but offered an alternative touchstone: “Prattling sports commentators should be sent to the Richie Benaud school of coverage. The late, great cricket commentator’s advice was: don’t tell viewers what they can see for themselves and refrain from stating the obvious.”


 

Jenny Austen had a different bête noire: “Yet again we are treated to watching someone who has just won a match at Wimbledon being subjected to inane questions. After battling to win, it must be frustrating to be asked, ‘How do you feel?’, when every competitor just wants to get off court and into a shower. Who insists on this pointless ritual?”

How do you feel about post-match interviews, and Wimbledon in general? 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.

 

On this day

1886 | Karl Benz takes his Benz Patent-Motorwagen out for its first public road test in Mannheim, Germany

1967 | ITV’s News at 10 first airs on television

1996 | Announcement that the Stone of Scone will be returned to Scotland after 700 years in Westminster Abbey (and our front page story on the moment below)

Birthdays
: Olivia Munn (46), Julian Assange (55), Tom Cruise (64)

Telegraph front page

Plus, in the news today, Rachel Reeves has joined the list of politicians photographed serving food in a McDonalds. Which of the following politicians has not taken part in the popular photo-op?

Rachel Reeves serves a meal in East Finchley

1. Donald Trump
2. Kamala Harris
3. Pat McFadden
4. Kemi Badenoch

You can find the answer at the end of this newsletter...

 

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 TERRARIUM. 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 at fromtheeditor@telegraph.co.uk.

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

Chris Evans, Editor

Quiz answer:

Kamala Harris

 

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jeudi 2 juillet 2026

Mandelson’s Russian connection

Kane rescues victory from jaws of defeat | The Bayeux Tapestry comes to London
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Thursday, 2 July 2026

Issue No. 494

Good morning.

Lord Mandelson was considered a “privileged contact” by Russian intelligence, The Telegraph can reveal. Moscow spymasters regarded the former US ambassador as one of their “most significant” achievements, and allegedly began contact with him shortly after the fall of the Berlin Wall. Camilla Turner has the story.

Elsewhere, Harry Kane saved England from what would have been an embarrassing early exit from the World Cup last night. Below, Oliver Brown, our Chief Sports Writer, looks ahead to the next knockout game against Mexico with a hint of trepidation and one message: it cannot go on like this.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. We’re giving email readers four months of The Telegraph for just 25p per month. If you’re already a subscriber make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

The projects that reveal how the MoD blows billions

What the French get right about food, weight loss and sex

Plus, a triumph or act of cultural recklessness? The Bayeux Tapestry comes to London

All Access: Just 25p per month

Enjoy free-thinking journalism, daily puzzles and more with your email-exclusive offer.

 

Russian spies considered Mandelson a ‘privileged contact’

Russian intelligence compiled a secret dossier on Lord Mandelson

Camilla Turner

Camilla Turner

Sunday Political Editor

 

For the past 30 years, Lord Mandelson has been a major figure in British politics, culminating in his appointment as US ambassador in late 2024.

His career came crashing down after his close relationship with Jeffrey Epstein, the American financier and convicted paedophile, came to light. It subsequently emerged that the disgraced peer failed security vetting amid concern over his links to senior figures in Russia and China.

Now, The Telegraph can reveal the existence of a secret dossier compiled by a former MI6 agent, which makes the extraordinary claim that Mandelson was considered to be a “privileged contact” by Russian intelligence.

According to the leaked report, codenamed Project Fish, Moscow spymasters regarded him as one of their most “significant” achievements in “manipulating” British politics for over three decades. Despite this, it does not provide evidence that Mandelson spied for Russia.

The dossier, compiled by Christopher Steele, the former head of MI6’s Russia desk, alleges that Mandelson was first contacted by the KGB shortly after the fall of the Berlin Wall.

Project Fish also alleges that the Russian intelligence services kept files on Boris Johnson, his former adviser Dominic Cummings, Nigel Farage and Jeremy Corbyn, among others.

This report is available only to subscribers.
Continue reading

Secret dossier reveals top politicians spied on by the Kremlin

 

World Cup diary

Harry Kane rescues victory from jaws of defeat

Kane headed in England’s equaliser then smashed in his second with his right foot

Oliver Brown

Oliver Brown

Chief Sports Writer at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta

 

Pure, unbridled relief. England were just 15 minutes away from one of their ghastliest World Cup humiliations when Harry Kane – who else? – engineered a glorious turnaround. His two late goals cemented his status as the country’s finest modern player and propelled him past even Pelé’s record with 13 goals on the grandest stage.

“Hero moments,” he called them, although that description had nothing to do with hubris. It came instead from overwhelming happiness, after the extraordinary striker dragged his team out of a hideous predicament once more and saved Thomas Tuchel’s job.

England cannot keep doing this. The semi-finals should be the time for brinkmanship, not a round-of-32 tie against the Democratic Republic of Congo.

For all that Tuchel’s changes worked, as Anthony Gordon played a part in both goals and Declan Rice proved to be a revelation as a makeshift right-back, the manager should not have been relying on his second hydration break team talk to make the difference.

He has been living on the ragged edge all tournament and can hardly expect such an error-strewn performance to work for England in the thin air of Mexico City in four days’ time. That match at the Azteca Stadium, against the endlessly vibrant co-host Mexico, promises to be monumental.
Read the full report and Oliver’s column here

Jamie Carragher: Harry Kane would be England’s greatest ever – if he had better team-mates

Sign up to Total Football for daily updates during the World Cup

World Cup scores

The USA’s impressive win over Bosnia was marred by Folarin Balogun’s sending off, while Belgium staged a late comeback to beat Senegal

 

Opinion

Allister Heath Headshot

Allister Heath

Burnham has declared war on the South. Your homes and savings are no longer safe

London and the South East already vastly subsidise the rest of the country. The answer is to liberate the North, not seize southern wealth

Continue reading

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

Tom Harris

Starmer’s spiteful, staggering £5bn hypocrisy

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">James Innes-Smith</span> Headshot

James Innes-Smith

The last thing drivers need is cyclists snitching on us to the authorities

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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Headlines

Plane crash

The plane crashed at midday yesterday

Wimbledon diary

Centre Court or Ryder Cup?

Rory McIlroy

Rory McIlroy attends day three at Wimbledon

James Corrigan

James Corrigan

at Wimbledon

 

Such are the joys of the Great British summer of sport that every now and then your golf correspondent has the pleasure of covering Wimbledon.

Sometimes you just cannot escape the day job, and so it proved yesterday when reporting from Centre Court felt oddly similar to covering the Ryder Cup. Rory McIlroy arrived decked in his Masters jacket, with his wife Erica alongside him. McIlroy, who retained his Masters title in April, is allowed to wear his Green Jacket outside of the Augusta National golf course because he is the reigning champion. Otherwise, it has to remain in the ultra-exclusive club.

This was not McIlroy’s first time at Wimbledon. Formerly engaged to the one-time world number one Caroline Wozniacki, the Northern Irishman is a huge tennis fan. As well as turning up at majors – he was at last year’s US Open – he often plays with Harry Diamond, his caddie. This is the first time he has shown up in SW19 in his Green Jacket, as he did not attend last year.

In 2016, England’s Danny Willett wore his Green Jacket in the Royal Box, having made his major breakthrough three months earlier. Fellow Team Europe stars Justin Rose and Tommy Fleetwood were also in attendance with McIlroy. Two-time captain Luke Donald was also there, along with assistant captains, Francesco and Edoardo Molinari, as the Royal Box started to resemble the Europe teamroom.

Go deeper with our full coverage:

Defending champion Sinner overcomes slow start to reach third round

Djokovic produces mini highlights reel as he romps past Tsitsipas

Watch: Andreeva hurls racket at umpire’s chair in match disrupted by Harry Kane goal

The Poshcast: Is tennis still the poshest summer sport?

 

Your essential reads

The catastrophic projects that reveal how the MoD blows billions

From delayed armoured vehicles to cancelled communications contracts, the Ministry of Defence’s (MoD) chronic mismanagement and shifting requirements have left our Armed Forces critically exposed, writes Roland Oliphant, our Chief Foreign Analyst. More military funding is finally on the way, but the MoD’s track record suggests the biggest battle will be spending it successfully.

For subscribers only

 

Supreme leader sends shockwaves through Iran with a single phrase

A single phrase from Iran’s supreme leader has plunged the Islamic Republic into chaos. By blessing a peace deal with the US “in principle” while admitting he favoured a different path, Mojtaba Khamenei has split his regime. As hardliners threaten Masoud Pezeshkian, the Iranian president, with his life and revolutionary guards prepare for war, Akhtar Makoii, our Foreign Correspondent, reports on a leader who refuses to be seen, leaving the men with the missiles to decide what happens next.

Continue reading

 

Dr Emilie Steinbach says families in France prioritise home-cooked meals over ultra-processed convenience foods

What the French get right about food, weight loss and sex

What is it about our Gallic neighbours’ approach to life that seems to make them happier and healthier than us? Emilie Steinbach, a French neuroscientist and nutrition expert who has lived on both sides of the Channel, may have the answer. She shares the everyday habits that differ between the two cultures, and how they affect our waistlines, minds and romantic lives. The question is: which is the better, the British or the French way?

Continue reading

 

What the world would have looked like if American independence had never happened

America will celebrate 250 years since declaring independence on July 4, but suppose it never happened and a United Kingdom of Great Britain and North America had bestrode the Atlantic to become a global superpower? A joint Pax Britannica-Americana might have been unchallengeable, writes David Blair, our Chief Foreign Affairs Commentator, preventing any world wars in the 20th century. All fanciful, of course, except that American independence could have been avoided 250 years ago if only the British government had been more sensible.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

The best new books to give to your children

When it comes to holiday reading, writes Emily Bearn, children tend to want something that is comfortable enough to enjoy in a deckchair, while still containing enough excitement to make them sit up straight. For younger readers, I would recommend The Adventures of Portly the Otter by MG Leonard – an enchanting collection of stories imagining what happened to Portly, the young otter cub from The Wind in the Willows.
Read the full review

For slightly older readers, Lauren St John’s latest novel Wild Horse Summer contains a winning combination of outdoor adventure and tack-room romance.

Read the full review

Here is another helpful article to read this morning:

 

Critic’s Corner

A triumph or act of cultural recklessness? The Bayeux Tapestry comes to London

Alastair Sooke

Alastair Sooke

Chief Art Critic

 

“A lovely idea, but it’s never going to happen.”

For years, that was how colleagues at Normandy’s Bayeux Tapestry Museum responded whenever English medievalist Michael Lewis suggested that the 11th-century embroidery should return to Britain for the first time in a millennium.

Others fretted that the risks involved in transporting across the Channel this unique but fragile artefact – which, at 224ft, is as long as a football pitch is wide and already pockmarked with 24,000 stains and almost 10,000 holes – were simply not worth taking. Thanks in large part to Lewis’s persistence, those doubters are about to be silenced.

This autumn, the Bayeux Tapestry will appear in a British Museum exhibition, curated by Lewis, that looks set to rank among its biggest blockbusters; when tickets went on sale this week, the museum’s website was inundated.

Ahead of the tapestry’s arrival in Britain, I talked to Lewis, Nicholas Cullinan, the museum’s director, and others in an attempt to understand whether this once-in-a-generation exhibition represents a victory for diplomacy and determination, or a reckless act of hubris.
Continue reading

 

Your say

In the driving seat

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 driving theory test is now a venerable 30 years old. Sitting mine was probably the high point of my motoring career to date. Oh yes, I was great at driving – top of the class – in theory. The difficulty was doing it in practice. It took me so long to pass that bit, in fact, that I ended up having to sit my theory test again. Which perhaps casts some doubt on the usefulness of the theory test in the first place.


 

This was Michael Dakin’s view after completing the condensed version included in our article: “All that little test confirmed for me was that knowing the correct answers bears little correlation with the ability to drive safely.”


 

David Cuthbertson added: “I don't think any of those questions were asked when I passed my test first time 40-odd years ago.”


 

Another reader complained: “I failed the hazard perception section because I spotted upcoming threats way before the test expected you to, and was told that ‘random’ clicking was not allowed.” I remember feeling similarly aggrieved about this during practice tests, so trained myself to be less superhumanly perceptive.


 

Others recalled a more relaxed system. E Parker wrote: “My theory test in the 1970s consisted of my examiner sitting in the car and asking me a few questions after the driving test. I got them all right and passed. Happy days.”


 

G Davies, meanwhile, looked back to the days before anyone thought a practical test might be a good idea: “My grandfather didn’t have to sit one. He just bought a licence from the post office. He never had an accident.”

How did you fare in our quiz? 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.

 

On this day

2005 | Ten Live 8 concerts are held around the world organised by Bob Geldof (and our front page the following day)

2014 | Nicolas Sarkozy is charged with corruption

2019 | Ursula von der Leyen is the first woman nominated to lead the European Commission with France’s Christine Lagarde, the first woman nominated to lead the European Central Bank

Birthdays: Margot Robbie (36), Lindsay Lohan (40), Larry David (79)

Telegraph front page

Plus, in the news today, Canada will compete in the 2027 Eurovision Song Contest, organisers have announced. Australia was the last country to join – in which year?

Canada will debut next year in the Eurovision Song Contest, which was won by Bulgaria this year

1. 2017
2. 2015
3. 2014
4. 2012

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 HALFPENNY. 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 at fromtheeditor@telegraph.co.uk.

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