dimanche 19 avril 2026

Starmer faces ‘cover-up’ storm

AI ‘receptionist’ stopping patients from making GP appointments | Five dresses to see you from spring to summer
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Sunday, 19 April 2026

Issue No. 420

Good morning.

If you think you have a case of the Sunday blues, imagine how Keir Starmer feels. Tomorrow, he’ll have to face MPs to explain his role in the Mandelson vetting affair. The PM has been accused of a cover-up and Camilla Turner, our Sunday Political Editor, says his make-or-break statement could sink his premiership.

Plus, Matt Oliver, our Industry Editor, asks: where could the cult of Ed Miliband lead us?

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

P.S. Try 4 months of The Telegraph for just £1 with your email-exclusive offer. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

AI ‘receptionist’ stopping patients from making GP appointments

The mystery of the last missing Seafire pilot

Plus, five dresses to see you from spring to summer (without looking frumpy)

Email exclusive: Try 4 months for £1

Enjoy all of our award-winning coverage for just 25p per month.

 

If Starmer misled the House, he’s toast

Camilla Turner

Camilla Turner

Sunday Political Editor

 

For a Prime Minister who loves nothing more than to follow the rules, it seems ironic that this may well be his downfall.

Sir Keir Starmer has repeatedly claimed that “due process” was followed when it came to Lord Mandelson’s appointment as US ambassador.

Now we know that Lord Mandelson had in fact failed his security vetting – and Downing Street is panicking.

As Sir Keir prepares for a make-or-break Commons appearance to explain himself, he faces accusations of a cover-up over the vetting scandal and a battle to save his premiership.

The Prime Minister has insisted that nobody in Downing Street was aware that Lord Mandelson was made US ambassador despite failing security vetting.

Starmer with Dame Antonia Romeo, who has been Cabinet Secretary since February

However, critics have questioned his defence after it emerged that his Cabinet Secretary and other senior officials were in fact aware of the decision for weeks before it was made public.

Sir Keir’s top aides are now locked in crisis talks over whether he needs to admit that he misled the House of Commons when he makes a statement to Parliament tomorrow.

It is understood that the Prime Minister acknowledges that he did not give MPs the “full picture” on Lord Mandelson’s appointment, but he has not admitted that he misled the House.

“The PM clearly feels that he wasn’t given the full picture so therefore wasn’t able to give Parliament the full picture,” a Downing Street source said.

Misleading the House would constitute a breach of the ministerial code, something which he has repeatedly called for ministers to resign over.

Continue reading

 

The cult of Ed Miliband

Through his ‘sheer bloody-mindedness’, Ed Miliband has a reputation within Government for getting things done

Matt Oliver

Matt Oliver

Industry Editor

 

In a Government that’s infamous for its policy reversals, one unlikely figure has repeatedly shown he’s not for turning.

Ed Miliband, the ukulele-strumming ex-Labour leader, has emerged as one of the party’s biggest beasts through championing net zero policies that delight his supporters and enrage his enemies.

The Energy Secretary, tasked with overseeing Sir Keir Starmer’s mission to generate 95 per cent of power from clean energy sources by 2030, is sometimes described as the only Cabinet minister who is actually getting anything done.

He has been signing off controversial plans for wind farms, solar farms, battery parks and nuclear power stations with the urgency of someone watching the clock.

It’s a stark turnaround in fortunes for a man who suffered a humiliating election defeat in 2015 and later concluded he’d been too timid. No one could claim Miliband is that today.

Ed Miliband had Labour’s 2015 election pledges carved into what became known as the ‘Ed Stone’

Instead, critics accuse him of “eco-zealotry” and a “cult-like” devotion to net zero targets, even at the expense of British households.

Now, with Starmer’s premiership wobbling and the Government looking directionless, Miliband’s position looks stronger than ever. Some even suggest he may take a second tilt at the premiership himself.

So just how did the man behind the “Ed Stone” end up becoming Labour’s North Star?

This essay is available to subscribers only.
Continue reading

 

Opinion

Camilla Tominey Headshot

Camilla Tominey

Banks have found another way to make our lives impossible

Overcomplicated protections against scammers don’t make us safer

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Jake Wallis Simons</span> Headshot

Jake Wallis Simons

The West is losing its moral compass

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Jamie Carragher  </span> Headshot

Jamie Carragher

Finishing second is a failure – Arsenal would be the most criticised runners-up in history

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Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Weekend reads

Obama’s shadow follows Trump in second round of Iran talks

Donald Trump spent years criticising the nuclear agreement signed with Iran by Barack Obama. The JCPOA was “horrible”, “one-sided” and the “worst deal in history”, he said. Now the president is on the verge of signing a weaker deal to get out of the war he started in Iran, says Lord Hammond, the former foreign secretary who helped to shape the 2015 deal, in an exclusive interview with The Telegraph.

Continue reading

 

Writer Della Galton, at her home in Shaftesbury, Dorset

‘I left my own wedding to go to the pub. This is how I finally overcame my alcohol addiction’

Since she started drinking cider behind the school bike shed, Della Galton, 61, knew she was an outlier when it came to alcohol. Despite being a successful fiction writer, her life was punctuated by hangovers, blackouts, and embarrassing encounters. Now 20 years sober, she reveals the moment she knew she needed to change and shares her tips on how you can change your relationship with alcohol.

Continue reading

 

AI ‘receptionist’ stopping patients from making GP appointments

The AI revolution has hit GP surgeries, but instead of speeding things up, it has made getting a doctor’s appointment “unobtainable” for millions of people. The Telegraph has uncovered countless problems with the AI system that have left patients and staff infuriated, including a lack of empathy, being hung up on and not being understood.

Continue reading

 

The mystery of the last missing Seafire pilot

In June 1945, 20-year-old Mervyn Harold Payne, Acting Sub-Lieutenant of the Supermarine Seafire, vanished over the vast Chuuk Lagoon in the Pacific. Flying his first operational mission, the mischievous young pilot disappeared into a “solid wall of black cloud”. For decades, his family endured the agony of a missing-in-action notice, haunted by contradictory accounts of anti-aircraft fire and catastrophic wing failure. Now, deep beneath the coral reefs, high-tech underwater drones are hunting for the truth.

Continue reading

 

Robert Hardman: ‘The Queen was enormously upset at how Harry and Meghan threw everything away’

When the Sussexes announced their royal exit, the late Queen privately noted they would not return for one telling reason: “They took the dogs.” Hardman, an expert on the Royal family, reveals the monarch’s deep sadness over the couple’s departure. He also uncovers the late Queen’s “sparkly” private side, detailing an unexpected verdict on Donald Trump and her remarkably unfazed reaction to Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s violent outburst.

For subscribers only

 

Your Sunday

Five dresses to see you from spring to summer (without looking frumpy)

The Telegraph’s fashion team runs through the dresses to see you through the season (without falling back on the familiar old floral variety). From sleek shirt dresses to a lighter interpretation of the Little Black Dress, our experts finesse a fresh approach to warmer weather dressing.

Continue reading

 

Devil’s Advocate

Gastropubs are a stain on the reputation of British boozers

Every week, one of our writers takes an unfashionable position, either defending a subject that’s been unfairly maligned or criticising something that most people love.

Gastropubs
Abigail Buchanan

Abigail Buchanan

Features Writer

 

If there is one thing Britain does incredibly well, it is the pub. Quantity and quality of boozers are perhaps two of the remaining categories in which our fair island is still far and away a world leader.

Yet, over the past three decades, we have allowed something terrible to creep in and challenge our reputation as the country with the best pubs. That terrible thing is the gastropub.

There’s the name, for starters. Gastropub. I hear this ghastly portmanteau and I think of gastrointestinal illness or gastric bypass surgery, not somewhere I want to spend the evening. I know I’m not the first to have pointed this out.

A caveat: I am not complaining about pubs that just happen to serve some food – in fact, quite the opposite. There are few greater joys in life than a humble bowl of chips and a pint.

It must also be said that there are exceptions to the rule. Some pubs serve “proper” restaurant-style food and do it very well (The Eagle, the original gastropub, in Farringdon, London is one such example). The trouble is that nowadays they are relatively few and far between.

More often than not, when I think of a “gastropub”, I think of the pub that has colonised your beloved local boozer and turned it into a soulless canteen that charges £8 for a scotch egg.

These pubs masquerade as independent, with tongue and groove panelling painted in Farrow and Ball, yet the mandatory calorie counts on the menu let you know they’re actually part of a vast chain. The “hand-cut” chips and chalkboard specials aren’t fooling me.

Which brings me to the food itself. They all serve the same sub-standard pub grub – a burger, fish and chips and usually a curry – yet charge restaurant prices for a meal that is nowhere nearly as good. To make it worse, you probably have to order at the bar.

On Sundays, there will inevitably be a £25 roast dinner, one element of which will always be the wrong temperature. At some, the food isn’t even made on site. Almost any other local restaurant would be a better option. Or just stick a chicken in the oven at home.

I also harbour sentimental feelings for a good old-fashioned carpeted boozer, the kind that only serves pork scratchings and sandwiches. Those pubs have become a rare breed. They risk dying out entirely unless something is done.

Crucially, you should be able to go for a casual drink at a pub without feeling like you have to order a sharing board. Dining may not be compulsory, but when there are only a handful of barstools reserved for those who aren’t eating, it feels like it is.

I take heart from the fact that the term “gastropub” has at least become deeply unfashionable. Even the publicans are distancing themselves from it. Oisín Rogers, co-founder of the Devonshire, London’s trendiest pub, said last year that he refuses to use the word as “it doesn’t mean anything anymore”.

A pub can be a good public house or a good restaurant; very rarely can it be both. Bring back the pork scratchings.

Do you agree with Abigail? Send your replies 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.

 

One great life

D​r​ ​Paul Knapman, Westminster coroner whose inquests included the Marchioness riverboat disaster

Dr Paul Knapman’s colleagues liked him for his quirks

Dr Paul Knapman, who has died aged 81, was the Westminster coroner who presided over high-profile cases such as the Marchioness riverboat disaster, the shooting of WPC Yvonne Fletcher outside the Libyan embassy and the Clapham rail disaster, writes Chris Maume, Deputy Obituaries Editor.

His first big case after he took over in 1981 was the shooting of five gunmen by the SAS during the Iranian embassy siege. When the jury took 55 minutes to decide the killings were justifiable homicide, he told them: “I am surprised it has taken you so long.”

The son of an optician, he entered the law after a childhood marked by his passion for the Sherlock Holmes stories. A gregarious member of the Athenaeum, where he strode every day across St James’s Park for lunch, he was a stickler for ceremony, and at work he insisted his junior staff wear jackets even at their desk – but many of his colleagues liked him for his quirks.

Police at the scene as the Marchioness pleasure boat is raised and refloated in August 1989: in the aftermath, Knapman was accused of arrogance

He came unstuck when presiding over the Marchioness disaster when he authorised the amputation of the hands of many of the 51 young victims – though it was a common practice in the days before DNA testing – and he was criticised for refusing to open the inquest.

Among his other inquests were the deaths of Paula Yates, Alexander McQueen and Margaret, Duchess of Argyll, and soldiers killed in Iran and Afghanistan.

Read more about his fascinating life here

 

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 EDUCATIVE. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Thank you for reading.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

P.S. Please share your thoughts on the newsletter here.

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samedi 18 avril 2026

Starmer set for showdown over Mandelson

‘Open’ Hormuz could mean very different things in Iran and US | The seven signs of ‘poshness’ in 2026
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Saturday, 18 April 2026

Issue No. 419

Good morning.

We told you in yesterday’s newsletter that the coming days would be critical for Keir Starmer. Now, his premiership is hanging by a thread as the row over Lord Mandelson rages on. A “furious” Prime Minister cast blame on the Foreign Office yesterday, but the blob fought back as allies of Olly Robbins, the senior civil servant sacked over the scandal, have said No 10’s claims are a “misrepresentation”. Tony Diver, our Political Editor, reports.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try 4 months of The Telegraph for just £1 with your email-exclusive offer. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

‘Open’ Hormuz could mean very different things in Tehran and Washington

Jeremy Vine: ‘Huw Edwards wasn’t well-liked – he bullied his bosses’

Plus, the seven signs of ‘poshness’ in 2026

Email exclusive: Try 4 months for £1

Enjoy all of our award-winning coverage for just 25p per month.

 

Starmer goes to war with Whitehall over Mandelson

Tony Diver

Tony Diver

Political Editor

 

“A s---show”. That was the verdict of one Labour minister as they surveyed the wreckage of the last 24 hours.

Keir Starmer has driven headfirst into one of the most dramatic Mandelson scandals for weeks, and he’s not out of the woods yet.

An extraordinary row between No 10 and the Foreign Office raged on yesterday, with claims and counter-claims about who knew Lord Mandelson’s security vetting had been denied.

Starmer said the “unforgivable” error of Olly Robbins, the most senior Foreign Office official, justified his departure from the Government and described himself as “furious”.

Adams cartoon

All sides now agree that Starmer did not know about Lord Mandelson’s vetting when he assured MPs that “due process was followed” over the disgraced peer’s appointment as ambassador to the US.

However, there are remaining questions about the role of Antonia Romeo and Cat Little, two of the most senior officials in the Government, who reportedly knew about Lord Mandelson’s vetting last month and failed to tell the Prime Minister.

Next week, Starmer will go head to head with Robbins as both men update MPs with their version of events.

Many questions remain about what Downing Street really asked the Foreign Office, and about the apparent lack of grip by No 10 on a highly sensitive appointment.

Kemi Badenoch, the Tory leader, is still looking for a scalp. The way this story is moving, she might yet get one.

This exclusive reporting is available to subscribers only.
Continue reading

Robbins in line for massive payout as allies insist he did nothing wrong

Inside the 48 hours of fury in No 10

I was vetted like Mandelson. Even if Starmer isn’t lying, he’s still to blame

 

Opinion

Camilla Tominey Headshot

Camilla Tominey

Starmer has just admitted he’s not up to the job of being Prime Minister

If Sir Keir is telling the truth about Lord Mandelson’s vetting, it means officials deemed him too irrelevant to inform

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Charles Moore</span> Headshot

Charles Moore

The Mandelson affair is a failure of our system, not one prime minister

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Richard Kemp</span> Headshot

Richard Kemp

Even Iran’s European appeasers now can’t deny the ayatollahs are losing

Continue reading

 

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In other news

weekend reads

‘Open’ Hormuz could mean very different things in Tehran and Washington

Oil tanker

Malta-flagged tanker Agios Fanourios I arrives in Iraq after sailing through the Strait of Hormuz

Iran has declared the Strait of Hormuz “open”, giving Donald Trump the breakthrough his administration has pursued so doggedly. Yet caution is warranted, writes Adrian Blomfield, our Senior Foreign Correspondent. While the US president has chosen to interpret the strait’s opening as evidence of his military strategy working, Iran has proved a point of its own: that it can close and reopen the waterway on its own terms. The threat it poses to the world’s most critical maritime chokepoint has not diminished. If anything, it has been underlined.

For subscribers only

 

‘There’s not a whole load of different Jeremys in the wardrobe,’ says Vine on juggling his jobs

Jeremy Vine: ‘Huw Edwards wasn’t well-liked – he bullied his bosses’

Jeremy Vine’s relentless routine – juggling live TV, a flagship radio show and a late turn to crime writing – leaves little room to dwell on events around him. However, in this interview, he speaks about the long shadow cast by one of his former colleagues. From memories of Huw Edwards’s “unknowable” presence to his own run-ins with anti-vaxxers and online abuse, Vine offers a candid account of a media landscape under strain.

Continue reading

 

The seven signs of ‘poshness’ in 2026

Britain’s traditional three-class system has little relevance today, but our perception of “poshness” remains fiercely intact. The Telegraph’s survey of 13,000 people has mapped the modern boundaries of status and, while private education remains a heavy indicator, the public now judges class on everything from voting Conservative to rhyming “scone” with “cone”. With four-bedroom detached homes and one specific countryside hobby topping the list, the new social ladder is utterly ruthless.
Continue reading

What class are you? Try our tool

 

Cliff Thorburn, 78, is snooker’s oldest living world champion

Cliff Thorburn interview: Guns, knives and Alex Higgins coming at me with a vodka bottle

There was a time during the 1980s when snooker briefly outstripped football in popularity, and one of its leading figures was the “Grinder” Cliff Thorburn. Now snooker’s oldest living world champion, Thorburn reveals the incredible stories behind his hustling days in North America, from fist fights with Alex Higgins to making the first 147 break at the Crucible.

Continue reading

 

The best and worst exercises for your gut health

We tend to focus on diet when it comes to gut health, but exercise plays a crucial role too. From walking to marathon training, the type and intensity of your workouts can shape your microbiome – for better or worse. Aimee Newton, a gut health specialist, explains what helps, what harms and why balance matters.

Continue reading

 

Michelle Bassam, 65, is a couples therapist at Harley Therapy, with more than 25 years’ experience in counselling

‘I’m a couples therapist. An affair needn’t destroy a marriage’

Over 25 years, I have witnessed subtle changes in my consulting room, writes Michelle Bassam. While technology and its implications (gambling, porn, online shopping) loom large, many of the themes remain the same as they’ve always been: money, affairs and a lack of communication. These are the signs your marriage will last – and when it’s time to throw in the towel.

Continue reading

 

Your Saturday

  • Read | This year has given us some marvellous books so far. Our literary editors have selected the best ones to try, plus new releases to look forward to.
  • Eat | Has tuna been cancelled? Unfortunately so. If you’re looking for an alternative, these are the healthiest tinned fish on the supermarket shelf.
  • Book... | We have some big events coming up at The Telegraph. Our class debate is next Friday (which you can get tickets for here) and The Daily T podcast is going on the road ahead of the local elections (you can be there in person by clicking here).
  • ... and save | You should shield your energy bills from the oil crisis too. These are the best deals to lock in before the price cap rises in July.
  • Sip | Jacob’s Creek is a nostalgic brand for many. The light, casual wine has returned to Tesco’s shelves – but has the wait been worth it?
 

Diana’s Weekend table

A successful fridge raid

Roast tomato soup with goat’s cheese and thyme toasts

Diana Henry

Diana Henry

The Telegraph’s award-winning cookery writer

 

Spring means the contents of my fridge have completely changed. There are lots of herbs – quite often half a packet – that need to be used. I buy parsley, thyme, chives and dill most weeks, even if I don’t know what I’m going to do with them. From April, there are always radishes and carrots in there too. It’s not the season for tomatoes, but I do what I’ve been doing all year: I buy big plum tomatoes, halve and roast them. If they’re getting too soft, whip them out and get them into the oven. If you have half a red pepper or some courgettes, stick these in a roasting tin as well. It’s never too early to make a roast tomato – or roast Mediterranean vegetable – soup. This one comes with goat’s cheese and thyme toasts, too.

Chicken, sugar snap and radish salad with carrot-miso-ginger dressing

We are at the salad-ish time of the year. It’s too early to go for feta, blueberries and baby leaves, but a substantial salad, with some meat in it, feels right. A recent fridge raid surfaced leftover chicken, sugar snaps – always sugar snaps, because I forget to eat them – and radishes that were getting a bit soft. I put them together in this salad, with a dressing that is more than a vinaigrette (the carrot and ginger dressing is basically a purée), which makes it seem more substantial.

Smoked trout and sea bass crudo with pickled radishes and salmon roe

It’s unusual to find fish in the “we need to eat this now” section of the fridge, but I bought sea bass this morning so that I could have it raw. I love raw fish. Those radishes needed to be soaked in iced water to restore their crunchiness, but this recipe was another good vehicle for them (in a very quick pickle that you keep in the fridge). There’s also smoked trout in this dish which you can use if you have any, or else stick with raw fish. A delicious reward for a raid.

Find me here every Saturday and in the new Recipes Newsletter, which you can sign up to here.

 

Your say

Egg-cellent technique

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...
Chaos in the Middle East, turmoil in No 10: such matters have their place in the news cycle, but this week, among Telegraph readers, one topic has arguably loomed larger than any other. I am talking, naturally, about boiled eggs, and, in particular, the question of how to peel one without disfiguring it.


 

Thanks for all your responses to Tuesday’s edition of From the Editor; the tips are still coming. Jane Thompson advises: “Drain the hot water the egg was boiled in, then refill the pan with cold water and leave for a minute or so. I’ve done this all my adult life. I learnt it from my mother, and mothers know best.”


 

According to Helen Kindt, meanwhile, “a squeeze of lemon juice or slice of lemon in the cooking water makes the shell slide off”. I hadn’t heard that one before.


 

“The classic”, adds Nick McCall, “is to pick a small hole at the narrow end and a slightly bigger hole at the opposite end, then gently cup the egg with your hands, put the narrow end to your lips and blow hard. The egg will fly out, completely peeled”.


 

If that sounds a bit laborious, another reader writes: “We have an egg-peeling tool from Lakeland. One of the best things we’ve ever bought.”


 

In other news, there was concern among readers on Thursday that this year’s swallows are taking their time to return. So it was cheering to receive the following vignette from the New Forest: “They are back in our stables and outbuildings, with many nests. They delight and scare us with their daredevil swoops in and out of the stable doors as we go about our routine with the ponies, narrowly avoiding colliding with our heads.

“They are not at all perturbed by our presence. Once the babies are born, it’s wonderful to hear the chirping as they eagerly await their next mouthful.”

That’s all from me for this week, folks. I’ll be back on Monday to bring you the best Telegraph talking points. In the meantime, you can contact me here.

 

Andrew Baker’s Saturday Quiz


Gather round for the latest instalment of my Saturday quiz.

  1. The Norwegian adventurer Thor Heyerdahl died on this date in 2002. What was the name of the raft on which he sailed across the Pacific in 1947?
  2. Rikki Tikki Tavi is the valiant hero of a story in Rudyard Kipling’s collection The Jungle Book. What kind of animal is he?
  3. Who fought Muhammad Ali in the famous Rumble in the Jungle in 1974, in Kinshasa, Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo)?
  4. Which author created the rumpled barrister Rumpole of the Bailey?
  5. All practising barristers in England must belong to one of four Inns of Court: Lincoln’s Inn, Gray’s Inn, Inner Temple and which other?
 

You can find the answers at the end of the 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 GEARWHEEL. 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. Please send me your thoughts on this newsletter. You can email me here.

Quiz answers:

  1. Kon-Tiki
  2. Mongoose
  3. George Foreman
  4. John Mortimer
  5. Middle Temple
 

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