mercredi 8 juillet 2026

Farage’s stunt descends into farce

Harry defiant in defeat, but his life’s work lies in ruins | How the family car became a luxury
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Wednesday, 8 July 2026

Issue No. 500

Good morning.

Nigel Farage’s by-election stunt has descended into farce. Labour, the Tories and Restore have said they will refuse to stand in Clacton, leaving the Reform leader alone on a ballot against novelty candidates. Nick Gutteridge, our Chief Political Correspondent, plots the four hours it took for Farage’s scheme to unravel.

Elsewhere, Hannah Furness, our Royal Editor, watched a “shaken, dejected and slightly disorientated” Prince Harry after he learnt that he had lost his court case against the Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday.

Plus, today marks the 500th edition of From the Editor. Matt has drawn an exclusive cartoon to celebrate the occasion, which you can find below.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. As a valued reader, we’re giving you exclusive early access to our Summer Sale. Join us today and try one year of The Telegraph for just £19. If you’re already a subscriber make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

The family car has become a luxury

Forgotten history of the Spice Girls’ Wannabe

Plus, Tim Spector: ‘Why I’m taking statins after avoiding them for nearly a decade’

Get early access to our Summer Sale

One year of free-thinking journalism, puzzles and more – all for just £19.

 

Farage’s stunt descends into farce

Nigel Farage’s high-profile gamble appears to have backfired

Nick Gutteridge

Nick Gutteridge

Chief Political Correspondent

 

Nigel Farage looked like a political leader gambling with his own future when he announced that he was triggering a by-election in Clacton.

In a video address, he painted the contest as a high-stakes battle of “the people versus the establishment”, in which the winner would take all.

Just four hours after the broadcast, the gamble seemed to have backfired as, one after another, all of the Reform leader’s political opponents said they would refuse to take part.

First out of the blocks was Rupert Lowe, whose Restore Britain has emerged as a major thorn in Farage’s side. He branded the contest a “media circus”.

Next were the Tories, who held Clacton until it was taken by Reform two years ago. Kemi Badenoch said she would not participate in a “fake by-election”.

Around 6.30pm, Labour’s National Executive Committee joined the fray, deciding that the governing party was “not going to indulge” Farage by taking part.

It left him facing the prospect of having to stand against a motley band of novelty candidates, such as Count Binface and the Monster Raving Loony Party.

By forcing this move, the Reform leader, who is facing two parliamentary investigations over donations he received, was trying to get a step ahead of the establishment.

Instead, the establishment turned the tables on him.

This analysis is available only to subscribers.
Continue reading

See more of our coverage below:

Farage by-election gamble turns to farce

Reform UK leader faces two inquiries over failure to declare donations

Janet Daley: Farage’s demagogic by-election stunt makes no sense

 

Harry defiant in defeat, but his life’s work lies in ruins

The Duke of Sussex at an Invictus Games event in London

Hannah Furness

Hannah Furness

Royal Editor

 

For a few hours, Prince Harry seemed humbled.

At Chatham House, where he gave the opening speech at an Invictus Games panel, he seemed shaken, dejected and a little disorientated shortly after learning that he had lost a £50m court case against the Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday.

Over an excoriating 436 pages, there was little comfort for Harry: a comprehensive loss in what has become the campaign of his adult life.

“Poor Harry,” said Paul Dacre, the chairman of Associated Newspapers, in a victory speech delivered by video. “I feel sorry for the way a confused and angry young man has been drawn into this case.”

The Prince sat through two hours of Invictus conversation, looking studiously forward.

He then disappeared with his team and emerged with a smile and a thumbs-up for the cameras.

Within the hour, it was clear why.

A statement, delivered in writing by Prince Harry and Baroness Lawrence, called the ruling a “complete and obvious whitewash”. The lengths the court had gone to in order to “exonerate” the newspaper group “is as shocking as it is totally unwarranted”, they said.

For a moment, I thought this was a chance for Prince Harry to pause, think and regroup.

A chance, even, for him to reset his relationship with Britain and the Royal family.

Instead, the battle against the establishment goes on.

This analysis is available only to subscribers.
Continue reading

See more of our coverage below:

Prince Harry loses £50m phone hacking case

Nicole Lampert: I was a witness in the Prince’s hacking case – and saw his desperation

Paul Dacre: The Mail’s court victory is a complete vindication of the free press

Sign up to Your Royal Appointment to receive Hannah’s expert analysis every week

 

Opinion

Allison Pearson Headshot

Allison Pearson

It’s time to remove Harry from the line of succession

The Duke’s failed court case and disastrous UK visit prove he remains a petulant boy who choked on his silver spoon

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Jeremy Warner</span> Headshot

Jeremy Warner

It’s painful to say, but an income tax raid is Burnham’s best option

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Celia Walden</span> Headshot

Celia Walden

Paying Britons to walk is just the start. Next we’ll be bribing people to brush their teeth

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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Headlines

Polar bear

A polar bear balances on the edge of an iceberg in east Greenland

Summer of sport

Messi in tears after comeback win, and the secret behind Fery’s no-fear mindset

Lionel Messi was an emotional wreck at the final whistle

Sam Dean

Sam Dean

Football reporter

 

Lionel Messi has played elite-level football for more than two decades but he continues to be as emotionally affected by this sport as any player or supporter. After Argentina’s extraordinary comeback victory against Egypt, the 39-year-old dissolved into floods of tears.

His side won in controversial fashion and are now thinking ahead to a possible semi-final against England. In Atlanta, the Argentina fans celebrated by bouncing in the stands and singing: “Whoever doesn’t jump is English.”

For Egypt, there was only anger. Hossam Hassan railed against the decisions that went against his side. He also questioned the appointment of a French referee, François Letexier, and said he would now take a “stand” by refusing to watch another minute of this World Cup.
Read the full report here

Elsewhere, Switzerland progressed to the quarter-finals after winning a tense penalty shoot-out against Colombia. They will face Argentina in the next round.
Read the full report here

Simon Briggs

Simon Briggs

Tennis Correspondent

 

Despite a lowly world ranking, British wild card Arthur Fery has shown phenomenal mental strength by reaching Wimbledon’s quarter-finals today. Intriguingly, one of the ways he honed that mental strength was by cliff-jumping as a teenager.

Fery leaps off a tower in France in a photo from his Instagram page

“I did use those kinds of things to work on losing the fear,” said Fery. It wasn’t long, however, before his parents clamped down on his daredevilry. “When I’m trying to make a career out of professional sports, it’s not the smartest thing to do.”
Continue reading

 

Essential reads

The family car has become a luxury

Britain’s family car is no longer the symbol of affordable freedom it once was. Skyrocketing vehicle prices, fuel costs, tax and parking are all climbing faster than our wages, pricing ordinary families off the road. If that isn’t bad enough, government plans to discourage vehicle ownership has shifted the war on motorists up several gears. Is Henry Ford’s mass affordability dream coming to an end?

Continue reading

 
Carolyn Harris before and after

‘I was an easy target because I was bigger’: Carolyn Harris before and after her 10st weight loss

Carolyn Harris MP: ‘I lost 10st on fat jabs. Now I dance and lift weights’

For Carolyn Harris MP, the trigger for her recent 10st weight loss was social media abuse. “I was sick of people calling me fat,” says the 65-year-old deputy leader of Welsh Labour. “It was completely destroying my confidence.” She speaks candidly about her experience taking Mounjaro and how losing weight has led her to rediscover the gym. 

Continue reading

 

The forgotten history of the Spice Girls’ Wannabe

Thirty years ago, the wacky, nonsensical debut single by five twentysomethings clad in mini dresses and platform boots changed pop music forever. Wannabe transformed the Spice Girls – Posh, Sporty, Scary, Baby and Ginger – from nobodies to global megastars. Rob Fitzpatrick has the inside story of how record labels and the music press almost missed the magic of Britain’s biggest ever girl group.

Continue reading

 

Comedian Iain Lee: ‘BBC star earning £400k mocked my £350 living-room gigs’

Iain Lee and Daisy Donovan

Iain Lee with ‘The 11 O’Clock Show’ co-star Daisy Donovan in 1999

Comedian Iain Lee once worked with Ricky Gervais and Sacha Baron Cohen, before spiraling into addiction, finding fame on reality TV, then spiraling into addiction again. Stephen Armstrong asks: why is he now charging £350 to perform private stand-up gigs in your living room?

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

Tim Spector: ‘Why I’m taking statins after avoiding them for nearly a decade’

Tim Spector: ‘My concerns about the side effects of statins dissipated once I experienced their health benefits’

I turned down my GP’s offer of statins after suffering a mini stroke in my fifties, writes Tim Spector. I believed the benefits were exaggerated and the side effects weren’t worth it. However, intrigued by the latest evidence that the drug may improve heart, gut and brain health, I started taking it last year, and was converted. Here’s why.

Continue reading

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

 

Trend translator

It’s hard to keep track of what’s in and what’s out when it comes to Gen Z. In today’s column, LA Robinson, our youthful Lifestyle Writer, investigates the spectacle of Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s nuptials.

Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift kiss after an NFL game in Kansas City in January last year

LA Robinson

LA Robinson

Lifestyle Writer

 

Remember the days gaudy celebrity weddings were splashed across tabloid covers in multi-million pound image rights deals? Like Posh and Becks’s Disney-esque 1999 nuptials at an Irish castle (the his-and-hers aubergine outfits and three-tiered Adam and Eve cake cut with a sword are the stuff of pop culture legend).

After the Catherine Zeta-Jones and Michael Douglas Plaza Hotel fiasco in 2000 – when a paparazzo gatecrashed the wedding and sold the photos to Hello! Magazine – the era of the hush-hush celebrity wedding crept in, with high-profile couples like Beyoncé and Jay-Z getting married in intimate ceremonies, far from the feeding frenzy.

Now, with the Super Bowl of a wedding that was Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s 1,000-person celebration at Madison Square Garden in New York last weekend, we’re back to bigger is better.

Thank goodness! Secretive ceremonies may be tasteful, but where’s the fun in that? If you don’t have tickets to Wimbledon this summer, gossiping about guest lists and dress designers over Pimm’s is the next best spectator sport.

This time around, tabloids are out and social media is in, so celebrities are taking it upon themselves to post their own photos and control the narrative.

Dua Lipa and Callum Turner

Dua Lipa and Callum Turner were married at the Villa Valguarnera in Sicily in early June

Dua Lipa treated her 88 million Instagram followers to exclusive snaps from her buzzy wedding to actor Callum Turner, a three-day dolce vita extravaganza in Palermo, Sicily. Pop star Charli xcx gave her followers a window into her Aperol spritz- and celebrity-studded bash in Italy last September for her wedding to fellow musician George Daniel. The internet salivated.

Now, the clock ticks on Swift to show us what it looked like inside her fairytale stadium celebration. I’ll be waiting patiently by my phone for Taylor’s new (wedding) album drop.

What do you think about celebrity weddings? Let me know here.

 

Your say

Beating around the bush

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 the past week, Telegraph readers have been waging war on euphemism, and one in particular. It started with a tweet by Kirstie Allsopp, who was unimpressed by a certain expression in Bafta’s announcement about the late Penelope Keith. “Dame Penelope did not ‘pass’,” chided the presenter. “She was not a car or a bottle of ketchup... Dame Penelope died.” In response, Jemima Lewis took to our pages to defend Bafta’s choice of words, accusing Allsopp of snobbery.


 

Charles Cooper, however, was not convinced. “Sorry, but I am with Kirstie Allsopp here. Our language is precious, and should be protected from ghastly euphemism and avoidance of discussing things deemed ‘not nice’. Passing away, or worse passing on, will not do.”


 

Timothy Morgan-Owen enlisted literary support: “A few years ago, while in New York, I remarked that Gertrude Lawrence died in 1952. I was told that this was a bit brutal, and I should have said ‘passed’. However, her friend Noel Coward put it succinctly in his 1939 play This Happy Breed. When Sylvia says, ‘Mrs Flint passed on’, Frank retorts: ‘She didn’t pass on or pass over or pass out, she died’.”


 

Perhaps, though, it’s not quite so straightforward. This letter, from Marion Price, made me think about the subject differently: “I would have agreed that ‘passed’ was an abomination and ‘died’ the only appropriate word to use until my husband died in 2024. I found that I simply could not say the word. Now I can. It took some time, however.”


 

Jonathan Mann added: “People should use the phraseology with which they are most comfortable; but while the phrase ‘passed away’ is now used as a euphemism, this was not always so.

“The phrase dates back to the early 1400s, when it was believed that after a person had died, and once the rites were concluded, the soul ‘passed away’ and began its journey to heaven or hell.

The Lay Folks Mass Book, from around 1400, contains the phrase: ‘Grant… rest and pese… to cristen soules passed away’. No one therefore should feel uncomfortable about whether they choose to use ‘died’ or ‘passed away’, the latter being far more than a way to avoid a blunt fact.”

Are you allergic to euphemism, or does it have its uses? 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

1950 | General Douglas MacArthur is named commander-in-chief of United Nations forces in Korea

1996 | British pop group the Spice Girls release their debut single Wannabe in Britain

2011 | Space Shuttle Atlantis is launched in the final mission of the programme

2014 | Germany defeat Brazil by a record 7-1 scoreline in the semi-final of the World Cup (see our front page from the following day)

Birthdays: Virgil van Dijk (35), Joan Osborne (64), Kevin Bacon (68)

Telegraph front page

Plus, in the news today, investigators claim they have found the long-lost remains of Alfred the Great. What did they find him buried under?

A statue of King Alfred ‘the Great’ in Winchester, where he is believed to be buried

1. A car park
2. A leisure centre
3. A school field
4. A Sainsbury’s

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 ORIENTEER. 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.

Get early access to our Summer Sale

One year of free-thinking journalism, puzzles and more – all for just £19.

 

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