lundi 13 avril 2026

McIlroy’s Masters once again

How Iran peace talks fell apart | Inside Trump’s relationship with the late Queen
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Monday, 13 April 2026

Issue No. 414

Good morning.

The Masters delivered again this year, and so too did Rory McIlroy, who became the first player since 2002 to defend the Augusta title successfully. With his family in tow, he held off the chasing pack on the final day of a pulsating weekend of golf, of which James Corrigan, our Golf Correspondent, witnessed every moment. His take? McIlroy is now a golfing great.

Elsewhere, the US and Iran sought a breakthrough that could end the war. It never came. After 21 hours of negotiations, the American team flew out of Pakistan with nothing to show for. Connor Stringer, our Chief Washington Correspondent, discusses where it all went wrong.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. We’ve extended our Spring Sale, exclusively for email readers. Enjoy a whole year of The Telegraph for just £25 while you can. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

The extraordinary behind-the-scenes story of Trump’s relationship with the late Queen

Royal Navy struggling to defend British waters while committing ships to missions abroad

Plus, we take you inside the renovated catacombs of Paris

Email exclusive: Spring Sale extended

Claim a year of The Telegraph for less than 50p per week.

 

Rory McIlroy becomes a golfing great with back-to-back Masters titles

Rory McIlroy gave supporters a scare at the 18th but a bogey was good enough to win

James Corrigan

James Corrigan

Golf Correspondent

 

Rory McIlroy joined one of golf’s most exclusive clubs last night when he became only the fourth man to successfully defend a Masters title.

It may not have been the rollercoaster scenes of last year, but at one stage it looked destined to come down to the same two men: McIlroy and Justin Rose, the Englishman.

Rose, three times an Augusta runner-up, was two ahead, but he wobbled at Amen Corner and it cost him.

This was McIlroy’s Masters Sunday, however, even if getting there had not been straightforward.

McIlroy did not enjoy anything like the perfect preparation having mistakenly changed irons at the start of the year before being forced to switch back and then came a back injury.

He used his three weeks off before the Masters well, flying up to Augusta from his Florida home on his private jet.

He worked so hard on his short game and this was the area that made the difference as his usually impeccable driving went alarmingly awry.

Rory McIlroy with his parents, Gerry and Rosie, wife Erica and their daughter Poppy. McIlroy’s mother and father missed last year's win, so this year was especially sweet for the family

Having led by six shots at the halfway stage, many thought he had one arm in the Green Jacket, but the Northern Irishman had to settle for a share of the lead going into the final day as the pack gathered momentum behind him.

The chasers would not relent. First Rose and then Scottie Scheffler, whose late charge heaped pressure on McIlroy.

Last year’s champion held his nerve, and inside Butler Cabin, McIlroy said: “I cannot believe I waited 17 years to get one Green Jacket and now I get two in a row.”

McIlroy’s sixth major title has cemented his status as an all-time golfing great.
Continue reading

‘The Silent Assassin’ opens up in tribute to his biggest supporters

Oliver Brown: Justin Rose suffers agonising Masters torment once again

‘Behaviour like Sergio Garcia’s shames golf’

 

21 hours, a dozen calls to Trump and no deal – how the peace talks fell apart

JD Vance

JD Vance (right) reveals the failure of the US and Iran to reach a peace deal

Connor Stringer

Connor Stringer

Chief Washington Correspondent

 

In the vast corridors of an Islamabad convention centre, the world’s press shuffled between buffets and coffee stations as they waited for history to be made.

For 21 hours, American and Iranian delegates remained in marathon talks, straining for a breakthrough that could end Iran’s nuclear programme and conclude the 43-day conflict.

It never came. By the time the journalists had begun filing their takes for the Sunday papers, the American team had boarded their flight out of Pakistan with nothing to show but a two-week ceasefire that looked set to collapse.

“The bad news is that we have not reached an agreement, and I think that’s bad news for Iran much more than it’s bad news for the United States of America,” JD Vance, the vice-president, announced moments earlier, visibly tired and unhappy, before returning to Washington.

Progress had been good. However, the vice-president quickly found himself in a deadlock with the same sticking points that had brought Iran to war on Feb 28.

Banners for Islamabad talks

Banners manifesting Islamabad’s optimism about brokering a peace deal were soon stripped down

Tehran refused to budge on the Strait of Hormuz and giving up its nuclear program while nearly 400kg of highly enriched uranium remained unaccounted for.

So, with no deal in sight, Donald Trump announced that the US would launch a naval blockade, shutting down the strait on his terms. All the while, a delicate ceasefire hangs in the balance.

This analysis is available only to subscribers.
Continue reading

Starmer refuses to join Trump’s Hormuz blockade

The strategic deadlock now facing Trump and Iran

 

Opinion

Tom Sharpe Headshot

Tom Sharpe

Trump’s blockade on a blockade is possible. That doesn’t mean it’s a good idea

If the desired outcome is to restore freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz I don’t understand the rationale of Potus

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Nadhim Zahawi</span> Headshot

Nadhim Zahawi

What if Trump hadn’t attacked Iran? The answer should terrify you

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Sean Thomas</span> Headshot

Sean Thomas

Bored by Artemis? Your intrepid ancestors would be disgusted

Continue reading

 

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In other news

Cate Blanchett in a Lanvin dress at the Olivier Awards 2026. She was nominated for her leading role in The Seagull.

Your Sport Briefing

Your essential reads

A top political journalist spoke to presidents Trump, Biden and Obama to reveal candid insights from their private meetings with Elizabeth II

The extraordinary behind-the-scenes story of Trump’s relationship with the late Queen

As Washington bureau chief for the news outlet USA Today, Susan Page has reported on seven White House administrations, 11 presidential elections and interviewed the last 10 presidents. For her new book, Page spoke directly to presidents Trump, Obama, Biden and Clinton. In an exclusive extract, we reveal new and previously unreported anecdotes of their time with Queen Elizabeth II, including an account of comments made by the late monarch about Harry and Meghan stepping back from royal duties. “I think she was stunned by what was happening, actually. She couldn’t believe it in real time,” Donald Trump told Page.
Continue reading

 

Hungarians turned out in record numbers to end Viktor Orbán’s premiership

Orbán concedes defeat in Hungarian election

It was nothing less than a democratic earthquake in Hungary’s hugely consequential election. Pro-Russian Prime Minister Viktor Orban crashed to a landslide defeat at the hands of challenger Peter Magyar, who has vowed to repair relations with the EU and Nato. It brings an end to 16 years of authoritarian rule by the hard-Right darling of MAGA conservatives who prided himself on being a thorn in the EU – and Ukraine’s – side. “My friends you have worked a miracle,” Magyar told his delirious supporters in Budapest, where the Telegraph was on the ground.

Continue reading

 

Al Carns, the Armed Forces minister, says surrendering sovereignty of RAF Akrotiri to Cyprus is ‘out of the question’

Britain’s bases in Cyprus ‘not up for negotiation’

After war broke out in the Middle East, Cyprus’s president announced plans to renegotiate the future of Britain’s “colonial” bases, writes Joe Barnes, our Brussels Correspondent. Despite being some 200 miles away, Iran and its proxies launched ballistic missiles and drones in the island’s direction. I spoke to Al Carns, Britain’s Armed Forces minister, in Cyprus, where he insisted that surrendering sovereignty over Akrotiri and Dhekelia was out of the question.

Continue reading

 

Before the five-month renovation, the catacombs received 2,000 visits per day

Inside the renovated catacombs of Paris

Paris’s sprawling catacombs have reopened after a €5.5m refurbishment designed to protect the bones of six million dead and transform the visitor experience. Henry Samuel, our Paris Correspondent, explores what has changed beneath the capital, from new lighting and air systems to the enduring draw for “cataphiles” of the forbidden tunnels beyond the reach of law-abiding tourists.

Continue reading

 

Royal Navy struggling to defend British waters while committing ships to missions abroad

We like to think of Britain as a serious maritime power. The reality is rather less reassuring, writes Matt Oliver, our Industry Editor. Russian submarines are probing our waters, the Middle East is pulling Western navies back into conflict, yet the Royal Navy is struggling to put enough ships to sea to respond. This is the consequence of decades of drift. Fewer ships, ageing vessels and delayed replacements have left ministers juggling impossible trade-offs. When the next crisis comes, the question is no longer whether Britain will act – but whether it still can.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

The most enchanting spring gardens in Britain

Greencombe

The woodland gardens at Greencombe, with moss-lined paths and flowering shrubs

Spring is when gardens feel most alive, writes Thomas Rutter, and in this piece, I wanted to capture that sense of movement and renewal at its most vivid. From the subtropical tangle of Heligan to the measured calm of Rousham, these are places where the season truly announces itself. Some are grand, others quietly atmospheric, but all reward a visit right now. If you’re planning a trip, this is where spring is unfolding at its best.

Continue reading

Below is one more article that I hope will improve your day:

  • Supermarket shelves are filled with kefirs, shots and kombuchas boasting microbiome-boosting claims, but do any deliver on their promises? Charlotte Lytton explains which ones are worth buying.
 

Caption competition with...

xx
Matt Pritchett

Matt Pritchett

Cartoon

 

Hello. I’m back from my Easter break and you’ve got a couple of punters at Aintree to caption. Best of luck, and may the best man or woman win!
Send me your captions here

P.S. For an inside look at what inspires my weekly cartoons, you can sign up for my personal subscriber-exclusive newsletter here.

 

Your say

Book worms

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...
My daughter is now properly interested in books, that is, she wants to follow the stories rather than find out what the pages taste like, and it’s a wonderful thing to see. For my part, I now have stronger views on, say, the respective merits of Kathleen Hale (a better illustrator than writer) and Rod Campbell (pioneering in his use of flaps, if a tad lazy on the plot front) than I do about the new Patrick Radden Keefe.

Still, like most people my age, I’m prone to casting my own reading aside because I think my phone may have vibrated. When I saw the warning from Frank Cotterell-Boyce, the Children’s Laureate, about the decline in reading for pleasure among young children, I felt sure that I could be setting a better example.


 

Telegraph readers, meanwhile, have been sharing their tips for instilling the habit. Jenny Whitebread wrote: “Last week, I came up with an idea for improving my five-year-old grandson’s slowly developing reading skills. My suggestion was that he reads simple books to his 11-week-old brother. So far, this has been a success, although his parents find his enthusiastic approach somewhat challenging, as he wakes the baby when he feels the time is right for a story. This has its own disadvantages.”


 

Mary Mullineux added: “During Covid, we read to our two grandchildren, aged six and five, every day for an hour via Zoom. This meant we had delightful daily contact with them, and their parents got a well-earned break. We were able to introduce them to the delights of many old favourites with wonderful illustrations, including Tim and Ginger by Edward Ardizzone, and Gumdrop, The Adventures of a Vintage Car by Val Biro. Today they read voraciously.”


 

This brought back memories for Charles Oliver: “The books Mary Mullineux mentioned – Tim and Ginger by Edward Ardizzone, and Gumdrop, The Adventures of a Vintage Car by Val Biro – are very familiar to us. We also read what would now probably be considered politically incorrect stories, like the terrific The Bear at the Huntsmen’s Ball by Peter Hacks, with all its references to hunting and a bear who drinks too much beer.”

My daughter is a big fan of bears at the moment, though in her books they tend to be doing very wholesome things, like baking cakes. Perhaps it’s time for her to learn that they aren’t always angels.

What are the best books to get children reading? 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.

 

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 HUMANKIND. 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 here.

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

Chris Evans, Editor

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dimanche 12 avril 2026

The curse of earning six figures

Which wild birds are in your back garden? | The people who sell the homes of killers and perverts
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Sunday, 12 April 2026

Issue No. 413

Good morning.

It may not sound like a hardship, but earning £100,000 a year is no longer the automatic route to a comfortable, fancy-free lifestyle. An amalgam of perverse taxes and laws now means that earning more can make you financially worse off. Below, you can play our game to see how far a six-figure salary really stretches. You may be in for a surprise.

Elsewhere, we have the latest from Iran, where peace talks ended overnight without a deal, and James Corrigan is in Augusta to report on the third day of the Masters.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

P.S. We’ve extended our Spring Sale, exclusively for email readers. Enjoy a whole year of The Telegraph for just £25 while you can. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Which wild birds are in your back garden? Use our interactive tool to find out

The people who sell the homes of killers and perverts

Plus, England’s 10 greatest pub towns, according to our expert

Email exclusive: Spring Sale extended

Claim a year of The Telegraph for less than 50p per week

 

Play our game to see how far a salary stretches

Lauren Davidson

Lauren Davidson

Executive Money Editor

 

Lamenting the hardships of earning over £100,000 runs the risk of evoking tiny violins. As Fiddler on the Roof’s Tevye proclaims when told that money is the world’s curse: “May the Lord smite me with it and may I never recover!”

However, it’s certainly true that a six-figure salary is no longer the guarantee of financial comfort it once was. The milestone has become something of a millstone thanks to a cocktail of perverse laws that mean earning more can actually make you financially worse off, a state-sanctioned disincentive for aspiration.

Not only does the tax-free personal allowance begin to taper, meaning 62p in the pound is lost to income tax and National Insurance, but childcare support worth tens of thousands of pounds a year is also withdrawn. In some cases, it’s not until workers earn £145,000 that they are better off than before they earned six figures.

It’s no longer just the wealthy elite who fall foul of the harshest cliff-edge in the British tax system. A record two million people will fall into the £100,000 “tax trap” this year, a steep rise from 1.2 million five years earlier thanks to frozen tax thresholds.

Don’t take my word for it. See for yourself how far a £100,000 salary stretches with our new choose-your-own-adventure game, which puts you in the position of a “High Earner, Not Rich Yet”. Step into Henry’s shoes, face his tax bill head on and spend his money while trying to stay within budget.
Play the game by clicking here

 

No deal

JD Vance boards Air Force Two to fly back to Washington

The United States and Iran have failed to reach a peace deal. After 21 hours of talks that finally ended just before dawn in Islamabad, JD Vance appeared before the world’s media to say he was going home. The US vice-president said the “bad news” was Tehran had “chosen not to accept” Donald Trump’s “flexible” offer, and he appeared to suggest a key issue was that Iran was refusing to promise it would never develop a nuclear weapon.

Follow the latest updates in our live blog

 

Opinion

Jake Wallis Simons Headshot

Jake Wallis Simons

Are Britons really cheering for the worst regime on Earth?

For the sake of blowing raspberries at Donald Trump, the chattering classes are ignoring Tehran’s barbarity

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Zoe Strimpel</span> Headshot

Zoe Strimpel

The trouble and strife with the ‘tradwife’ way of living

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Janet Daley</span> Headshot

Janet Daley

Stop asking voters what they want, instead tell them what they need

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Weekend reads

McIlroy’s six-shot lead was whittled down to nothing on a barmy day

Madcap McIlroy sets up a Masters classic

Rory McIlroy saw his record six-shot lead wiped out here at the Masters on an utterly bonkers day. American Cam Young has tied McIlroy – who is attempting to become only the fourth champion to retain the Green Jacket – but the Northern Irishman’s madcap 73 has let so many more players crowd into the frame on what could be a classic concluding Sunday.
Continue reading

Oliver Brown: Rory’s greatest enemy on the final day will be himself

 

Which wild birds are in your back garden? Use our interactive tool to find out

The results of the 2026 RSPB Big Garden Birdwatch are in, and it’s not good news for greenfinches. With numbers down 67 per cent since 1979, the species has been devastated by trichomonosis, a disease that spreads quickly among summer bird feeders. Meanwhile, the ever-present, ever-friendly sparrow remains the most sighted species, but which birds are in your garden?

Use our tool (and listen to their songs) to find out

 

Five subtle signs your relationship is turning toxic

Abuse in relationships can be surprisingly hard to spot. While physical abuse leaves visible scars, the effects of emotional and coercive control can seep deep beneath the surface – for example, downplaying bad behaviour or losing your sense of identity. Psychotherapist Dr Sara Kuburic shares the red flags to watch out for.

Continue reading

 

The Belgravia townhouse of Ghislaine Maxwell, which was sold for ‘a steal’ at £1.75m

The people who sell the homes of killers and perverts

Flogging a luxury home is difficult, but what if the owner is Huw Edwards? The price of the disgraced news presenter’s detached house in salubrious Dulwich was recently slashed to £3.85m. It joins a grim market of notoriously problematic properties, alongside Rolf Harris's seemingly unsellable riverside home and Ghislaine Maxwell’s discounted townhouse. From weeding out true-crime voyeurs to legally mandated paranormal disclosures, shifting an infamous address requires one brutal compromise.

For subscribers only

 

Writer Annabel Harrison, pictured with her family, recommends Butlin’s as a ‘no-fly, no-frills British break with non-stop entertainment’

‘I swapped the Balearics for Butlin’s – and fell in love with this bastion of British holidays’

More accustomed to boutique hotels than budget breaks, I had long assumed my family was simply not the Butlin’s type, writes Annabel Harrison, Travel Writer. However, could a weekend of wholesome fun amongst the Redcoats, breakfast buffets and big tops convince me that there’s more to this bastion of the British holiday heyday than meets the eye?

Continue reading

 

Samuel West (left) is exploring west Cornwall with Adrian Edmondson in his new Channel 5 series, Sam & Ade Go Birding

Samuel West: ‘You only find out who you really are after your parents die’

After losing both of his celebrity parents – Prunella Scales and Timothy West – in the last couple of years, actor Samuel West talks to Benji Wilson about how he is adapting to life without them. “I thought I understood what not seeing them ever again meant,” he says, but: “I’d give anything for an hour with them now.”

Continue reading

 

Your Sunday

England’s 10 greatest pub towns, according to our expert

The qualities of England’s towns are not, to put it mildly, universally appreciated, writes Tim Hawkes, Travel Writer. The truth is, whatever their perceived deficiencies, plenty of English towns are full of excellent pubs – most of which are the sort of community-focused places that many assume to be a thing of the past. I’ve selected 10 of my favourite pub towns, spread all across England

Continue reading

 

Devil’s Advocate

Artemis II was a waste of everyone’s time and money

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.

Artemis II graphic
Jess Benjamin

Jess Benjamin

Head of Digital Features

 

“Historic”, “record-breaking”, “a new dawn in space flight”: all descriptions of the recent Artemis II mission to the Moon. In fairness, they aren’t inaccurate – yet, to my mind, it all seems a little over the top.

“But we’re on the Moon!” I hear you cry. Actually, we aren’t. We’re just near the Moon. The Artemis II mission is akin to regaling a crowd with the time you met and befriended David Beckham when actually, you just saw him. At a football match. From a distance.

Aren’t we forgetting that we have done all of this before, 57 years ago? I would have been genuinely impressed by the Apollo 11 flight, the culmination of a decades-long space race and an awe-inspiring feat of science. Now, it’s 2026. Last year alone we launched around 4,510 objects into space. Unmanned space junk is a real problem. The last thing we need is to send more bits and bobs up there.

May I also draw your attention to the website “How many people are in space right now?”, which, at the time of writing this, was 14. Chinese astronaut Zhang Lu has been on board the Shenzhou 21 mission for 160 days now. Artemis II commander Reid Wiseman, meanwhile, was away for 10 days.

Even their anxiety-inducing loss of contact with Earth was for a grand total of… 40 minutes. “It’s so great to hear from Earth again,” Christina Koch, the astronaut, said. Perhaps she’s been speaking to my mother, who shares similar sentiments on a 40-minute “loss of contact”.

Then, there’s the cost. The eye-wateringly large cost. It’s estimated to cost $4.1bn (£3.1bn). A 500g jar of Nutella taken aboard has cost, in terms of the weight to payload, $75,926 (£56,944). Luckily, Trump doesn’t seem to have any wars to fund, or a $39tn (£28.9tn) national debt.

Listen, I know the purported reason for the mission is to test the waters for future deep-space exploration. However, at a time when money is tight and conflicts are raging, it just seems in rather bad taste. Come back to me when we set foot on Mars. Now that would be impressive.

Do you agree with Jess? 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

Doug Allan, leading wildlife cameraman who captured unique footage for David Attenborough’s TV shows

“Getting close to animals... is not an art, it’s not a technique, it’s both of those and something else,” said Doug Allan, the Scottish cameraman who captured amazing footage for David Attenborough’s TV shows, writes Andrew M Brown, Obituaries Editor. Allan, who has died aged 74 while trekking in Nepal, was described by Attenborough as “the toughest in the business”.

He had been inspired to learn undersea diving and photography by the work of Jacques Cousteau, and when he first met Attenborough he was with the British Survey diving in icy Antarctic waters. “I want to make natural history films,” he announced. “How do I start?”

Allan at the McMurdo Sound in Antarctica in 2008

Allan captured some of the most dramatic footage ever seen, in BBC series including The Blue Planet and Planet Earth. He filmed polar bears chasing beluga whales underwater and leopard seals feeding on emperor penguins in Antarctica. One striking example of predators co-ordinating their attack was the scene of killer whales tracking down seals basking on ice-floes and beating their tails in unison to make waves to tip them into the sea. Allan captured this “wave washing” for Frozen Planet.

An adult male elephant seal roaring, photographed by Allan at Signy Island, Antarctica

The programmes Doug Allan worked on for the BBC were hailed as justification for the licence fee virtually on their own, and he was showered with awards. Latterly a vocal environmental campaigner, he was appointed OBE in 2024.
Read his obituary in full 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 DRUNKENLY. 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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Telegraph Media Group Holdings Limited or its group companies - 111 Buckingham Palace Road, London SW1W 0DT. Registered in England under No 14551860.