samedi 23 mai 2026

Inside Labour’s Brexit civil war

Pick your England World Cup starting XI | The secrets to a crowd-free bank holiday
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Saturday, 23 May 2026

Issue No. 447

Good morning.

It may have seemed that the Brexit debate was finally over, but the drama of the past week suggests otherwise. Andy Burnham and Wes Streeting have opened Pandora’s box with their conflicting signals on Britain’s future relationship with the EU. The reopening of the Brexit culture wars is particularly divisive in areas that backed Labor in recent elections but voted Leave in 2016. Ben Riley-Smith, our Chief Political Commentator, travelled to Walsall to see how the issue risks alienating voters in the party’s traditional heartlands.

Elsewhere, our travel team let you in on the secrets to a crowd-free bank holiday at the nation's favourite destinations. You can read the full story below.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Did you know, you’re eligible for our email-exclusive offer? Try All Access today 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

Pick your England World Cup starting XI

The Iran-backed militiaman accused of anti-Semitic terror attacks in London

Plus, the secrets to a crowd-free bank holiday in the UK’s tourism hotspots

Try 4 months for 25p per month

Save on an All Access Subscription with your email-exclusive offer

 

‘There’ll be civil war’: Inside Labour’s toxic Brexit gamble

Ben Riley-Smith

Ben Riley-Smith

Chief Political Commentator

 

The B-word is back, for Labour at least. This past week, the debate about whether it is time for Britain to rejoin the European Union has been splashed across the front pages.

It was triggered by Wes Streeting’s first speech after resigning as health secretary when he said he hoped to see Britain back in the bloc “one day”.

His intervention had a heavy political edge as Streeting knows his hopes of becoming prime minister rest on winning over the pro-EU Labour members.

With a surging Green Party and a leadership contest looming, Labour figures are increasingly happy to share their Remainer sentiments in public.

But Streeting’s move has opened Pandora’s box.

A trip to Walsall, where the party lost all but one of its councillors, showed deep political peril in the approach. This corner of the West Midlands has seen Nigel Farage’s Reform surge.

Simran Cheema, that last remaining Labour councillor in Walsall, told The Telegraph that promises to rejoin would backfire and anger voters who were already disillusioned with her party.

“There’ll literally be a civil war in this country,” Cheema said at the prospect, with no sign that she was joking. “Really. I think people will go absolutely crazy.”
Read the essay in full here

 

Opinion

Camilla Tominey Headshot

Camilla Tominey

Andy Burnham owes the women of Britain an apology

His latest U-turn on transgenderism is laughable given he was backing the gender extremists when it really mattered

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Stephen Daisley</span> Headshot

Stephen Daisley

Wanted: Green Party candidate. Only crackpots need apply

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">William Sitwell</span> Headshot

William Sitwell

Woke authors who boycott book festivals should hang their heads in shame

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

A four-year-old girl cools off at Droitwich Spa Splash Park

weekend reads

Our experts pick their England teams for World Cup opener – and so can you

Thomas Tuchel has been detained by US customs at the World Cup this summer, writes Josh Burrows, Head of Sport Publishing. You have been appointed England manager in his place. Who do you start up front with Harry Kane? Can Declan Rice and Jude Bellingham dovetail in midfield? Use our player-by-player guide, pick the XI you would start and see how it measures up against our writers’ selections.
Pick your England XI

Read our player-by-player guide

Sign up to our Total Football newsletter for daily analysis during the tournament

 

Mohammad Baqer Saad Dawood al-Saadi was brought to the US last week and charged with plotting at least 20 terrorist attacks

The Iran-backed militiaman accused of anti-Semitic terror attacks in London

Within Iran’s overseas terror network, Mohammad Baqer Saad Dawood al-Saadi was considered “minor royalty”. A Kataib Hezbollah commander who proudly shared photographs of himself with the late Quds Force commander Qassim Soleimani, the 32-year-old is now accused of orchestrating a chilling wave of anti-Semitic violence across the West, from firebombing Hatzola ambulances to stabbings in broad daylight in Golders Green.

Continue reading

 

Dame Joan Collins: ‘I don’t eat junk, I get eight hours of sleep, I exercise. It’s very simple’

Dame Joan Collins: I have never thought about my mental health

Dame Joan Collins turns 93 today – not that I was supposed to ask about her age when we sat down at the champagne reception for a new Harley Street clinic this week, writes Amy Packer. The Hollywood actress has lost none of the sparkle or razor-sharp wit that have helped sustain her career across eight decades. I soon discovered that this no-nonsense approach extends to how she stays sprightly, too.

Continue reading

 

Andy Mee's drinking worsened during the pandemic, which prompted his wife to issue an ultimatum

‘I used to drink three bottles of wine a day, but was convinced I wasn’t an alcoholic’

I never believed I was an alcoholic, writes Andy Mee. I was a professional who drank £30 bottles of wine, not cheap spirits on a park bench. However, my habit escalated into a vicious cycle of stashing empties in my car boot and tilting bottles on the rack so they looked full. It was only when my wife left with our children that the truth hit me.

Continue reading

 

Your Saturday

The secrets to a crowd-free bank holiday in Britain’s tourism hotspots

Keen to avoid the hordes heading to the nation’s most popular destinations for the bank holiday? We asked our travel experts how to have a peaceful break this weekend. They shared their favourite ways to dodge tourist traffic and find quieter corners of the country, from the coastal charm of Cornwall to the rugged fells of Cumbria.

Continue reading

Here are some more useful articles for you this bank holiday weekend:

  • Fashion | If your heatwave wardrobe is looking a little dated, these items are ideal for a refresh.
  • Gardening | Our experts suggest the best ways to water and protect your plants during hot, dry weather.
  • Sleep | If the heatwave has left you tossing and turning, try these expert-approved tips to stay cool and get the rest you need.
 

Food for thought

Have you got plans for this weekend? Whether you’re staying in or going out, we’ve got you covered. Every week, Diana Henry, The Telegraph’s award-winning cookery writer, brings you three dishes for a perfect weekend meal. Meanwhile, William Sitwell shares his view from the culinary world – and a recommendation or two.

If you’re staying in...

Poached apricots with star anise and vanilla

Diana Henry

Diana Henry

The Telegraph’s award-winning cookery writer

 

I can’t quite believe we’re here. It’s practically summer! There are ingredients that really mark the change of season for me. Asparagus is one, and strawberries too, but what really says summer to me is apricots.

Apricots were in independent greengrocers a few weeks ago, but now you can get them in some supermarkets too. What is wonderful about apricots? That even when they’re nothing more than “okay” when raw, heat makes them luscious and honeyed, with a flavour that teeters between tart and sweet. Every year I make, in this order, apricot and frangipane tart, apricot and almond upside-down cake (if you receive my Recipes newsletter you’ll see it in the weekly meal planner today), and some kind of poached or baked apricots.

As it’s a lazy weekend – I don’t know who will be around to eat; I just have things on standby or that I can eat myself – I’m going for poached apricot, with star anise and vanilla.

Fennel, courgette and pickled red onion salad with feta

There are months of tomato and green salads ahead. I eat tomatoes every day until it gets to September, even October, until they are too woolly in texture or too bland in flavour, then I start roasting them. The best tomatoes don’t even need a properly made dressing – a little white balsamic vinegar, seasoning and a favourite extra-virgin olive oil does the job – but it’s easy to fall into a rut with salads.

When the produce is great you can rely solely on its quality – a good thing – but this can stop you considering anything unusual, anything with layers of flavour, such as this fennel, courgette and feta salad. It’s almost thirst-quenching.

Piadina, Italian flatbread

The salad is good just on its own but works well with lamb chops – sprinkle them with chilli flakes, season and griddle them – or chicken kebabs. Kebabs are one of those things that can be a bit ordinary, especially if you overcook them or you haven’t marinated them with care.

These Persian ones are anything but. The yogurt and the grated onion flavour them all the way through. As well as the salad, I’ll make warm flatbread to go with them. You might prefer to buy them, but try these (pictured above if you have the inclination). They’re Italian, don’t need yeast, and are quite flat – they’re used to make wraps in Italy.

Finally, before you go… if you’re planning a productive bank holiday weekend, read Silvana Franco’s guide to reorganising and reviving your spice rack. If you’d rather sit back and sip something nice, make it a rosé tipped by Victoria Moore.

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

If you’re eating out and fancy taking your dog along with you, don’t get on the wrong side of William Sitwell, our Restaurant Critic...

‘In our hospitality setting, the rule is no dogs in the dining room’

William Sitwell

William Sitwell

Restaurant Critic

 

This week, a story emerged of a woman who brought her dachshund in a pram to a London pizza restaurant and set it on the floor on an absorbent puppy pad. It focused my mind on hospitality “petiquette”.

I love dogs but, as I write this week, we confine them to the bar of my restaurant, the White Hart. Were I to find any owners letting their hounds do their business indoors, rather than by a nearby lamppost, they would of course be swiftly invited to sling their hooks.

For tips on how best to bring a dog into a restaurant I defer to Liz Wyse, etiquette adviser to Debrett’s, who says: “You might think your dog is a miraculous near-human [but] don’t let it sit on your lap and put its paws on the table, and under no circumstances should you let it lick your plate.”

She made no mention of puppy pads but it’s safe to assume that would be considered even less de rigueur than plate licking.
Read William’s column here

 

Your say

Dreaming of brussel sprouts

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...
Thanks for all your replies to this week’s newsletters. Many of you responded to Wednesday’s edition, on wartime memories and correspondence, with stories of your own. I’m only sorry there isn't space to include more of them.


 

Amy Gray writes: “My father has the letters my grandfather wrote home to his mother from Burma in the Second World War. They are such a vivid depiction of the campaign. This was after he was evacuated from the jungle: ‘Eventually we made an American hospital where the food was wonderful after nine weeks of concentrated rations. What I longed for most was vegetables and fruits of which of course we had none. I dreamt of Brussels sprouts and got tinned peas but I couldn’t eat a thing, couldn’t sleep, felt as weak as a chicken and was very glad after two days they flew me in an ambulance plane back to India, to a proper hospital. I still couldn’t eat or sleep and India is very hot after Burma. They gave me fruit juice and chicken’.”


 

Fay Goodwin adds: “I was six months old when war was declared. We lived in Kentish Town, north London, and I was evacuated to Luton with my two half-sisters. My dad fetched us back after a few months, as he reckoned that we were lodged in a house of ill repute. We eventually moved to Edgware, as our house was damaged by a bomb. Apparently it wobbled like a jelly.”


 

Now for something completely different, befitting the bank holiday: G&T. Yesterday I confessed that I couldn’t see its appeal, and readers have risen to its defence.

One advises: “Keep slices of lemon or lime in the freezer. I hate my gin and tonic diluted by large quantities of ice (or tonic). One part gin (Bombay Sapphire or Tanqueray) to two parts tonic, plus just one ice cube.”


 

Patrick Hodgson recalls how he developed his habit: “My parents used to keep gin in the fridge when I was a four year old in East Africa. Unfortunately, they also stored drinking water in Gordon’s bottles there, so when I got curious and bit on a chilli from the garden, I rushed for the water, only to take a deep swig of gin. I have been addicted ever since.”

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

 

Andrew Baker’s Saturday quiz

Quiz options this week

Come together for the latest installment of my Saturday quiz.

1. The bank robbers Bonnie and Clyde were ambushed and killed by police in Louisiana on this date in 1934. What were their surnames?

2. After which king of France is the state of Louisiana named?

3. The great jazz musician Louis Armstrong mainly played which instrument?

4. Neil Armstrong was the first man on the moon; Buzz Aldrin the second. Who was the third?

5. Astronaut Buzz Lightyear features in which film franchise?

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 CAFETERIA. 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. Parker and Barrow
  2. Louis XIV, the “Sun King”
  3. Trumpet
  4. Pete Conrad
  5. Toy Story
 

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vendredi 22 mai 2026

Police will include sex claims in Andrew investigation

Burnham’s Cabinet is already taking shape | Labour prepares £1bn stealth tax on family holidays
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Friday, 22 May 2026

Issue No. 453

Good morning.

In the past couple of hours, the police have announced they will assess allegations of sexual misconduct as part of their investigation into Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor. The former prince was arrested in February on suspicion of misconduct in public office. Thames Valley Police is currently examining one allegation that a woman was trafficked into Britain by Jeffrey Epstein in 2010 to have sex with Mr Mountbatten-Windsor at Royal Lodge in Windsor. Will Bolton reports.

Elsewhere, Angela Rayner has become embroiled in a row linked to alleged electoral fraud at her local council.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Did you know, you’re eligible for our email-exclusive offer? Try All Access today 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

Burnham’s Cabinet is already taking shape

The dark truth about geisha girls from one who escaped

Plus, six foods that raise your heart attack risk (and what to eat instead)

Try 4 months for 25p per month

Save on an All Access Subscription with your email-exclusive offer

 

Police will include sex claims in Andrew investigation

Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was arrested on his 66th birthday

Will Bolton

Will Bolton

Crime Correspondent

 

Thames Valley Police (TVP) has revealed that, following Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s arrest in February on suspicion of committing misconduct in public office, it is now also considering allegations of sexual misconduct and corruption.

Police sources said the investigation was continuing at pace. Potential evidence collected from Mr Mountbatten-Windsor’s home following his dramatic, unprecedented arrest is being studied by officers.

TVP is currently assessing one allegation that a woman was trafficked into Britain by Jeffrey Epstein in 2010 to have sex with Mr Mountbatten-Windsor at Royal Lodge in Windsor. The force has been in contact with the woman’s legal team.

Officers also urged any women who had been abused by Epstein to contact them if they had information that could assist their investigation.

Yesterday, following the publication of newly released documents, it emerged that the former prince had told officials he would prefer to visit “more sophisticated countries” while working as a trade envoy from 2001 to 2011. The documents also detailed the late Queen’s desire for him to take on a “prominent role in the promotion of national interests”.

Whatever happens next, it will not be the last time revelations about the former Duke of York make their way on to the front pages.
Continue reading

See more of our coverage below:

Andrew preferred to visit ‘sophisticated countries’, trade envoy files reveal

Andrew refuses to give up freedom of the City of London

 

Rayner embroiled in ‘election fraud row’

Angela Rayner with Atta Ul-Rasool, the successful Labour council candidate in Tameside, in 2022

Gordon Rayner

Gordon Rayner

Associate Editor

 

No sooner has Angela Rayner been cleared of deliberately avoiding tax than another investigation into alleged wrongdoing has sprung up uncomfortably close to home.

Atta Ul-Rasool, the chairman of Rayner’s Constituency Labour Party in Ashton-under-Lyne, is alleged to have benefited from an illegal attempt to influence the outcome of this month’s local elections.

Ul-Rasool was elected to the St Peter’s ward on Tameside council, defeating independent candidate Ahmed Mehmood by just 177 votes.

Mehmood has cried foul, claiming that two other independent candidates – who between them gained 291 votes – were stooges “planted” by Labour to draw votes away from him.

A whistleblower has told the local Manchester Mill website that a Labour activist discussed the idea of putting up bogus candidates to split the opposition vote during a barbecue at Rayner’s house. It is not suggested that Rayner was present during any of the alleged conversations.

Five people have been arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to defraud as part of a police investigation into how candidates were put forward.

Both Rayner and Ul-Rasool have dismissed suggestions of a plot as baseless.
Read the full story here

 

Opinion

David Frost Headshot

David Frost

Rachel Reeves’s economic farce is about to become a tragedy

The socialist policies hardening beneath the Chancellor’s meddling with market prices are no laughing matter

Continue reading

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

Sherelle Jacobs

On the ground in Makerfield, Andy Burnham doesn’t feel like a winner

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Helen Down</span> Headshot

Helen Down

I loved my dog more than anything – but I gave her away after four years

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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Headlines

Nepal has issued a record 492 permits for Everest this season

Essential reads

Burnham’s Cabinet is already taking shape

Last night, The Telegraph revealed that Wes Streeting would likely have a place in Andy Burnham’s Cabinet were he to become prime minister. It has become clear that, even though Burnham is yet to seal his return to Westminster, the contours of his future top team are already beginning to take shape. Labour’s major players have begun jostling for position in the expectation that the Mayor of Greater Manchester will win the Makerfield by-election and launch a bid for No 10. Nick Gutteridge assesses the potential future frontbenchers.
Continue reading

Burnham expected to include Streeting in future Cabinet

 

The dark truth about geisha girls from one who escaped

As a young woman in the closeted and deeply traditional world of Kyoto’s “geiko”, Kiyoha Kiritaka was expected to pour drinks, perform dances handed down through generations and laugh demurely at businessmen’s bad jokes, writes Julian Ryall. However, it did not take long for the dark side of the nation’s legendary entertainment industry to emerge. The memoirs of this geisha are of being groped, narrowly escaping being forced to take a bath with a client and having her virginity put up for auction. Still a teenager, she fled the “willow world”, she tells me, to help other young women shocked at what really happens behind the sliding paper doors of the ancient capital.

Continue reading

 
George Skeggs

George Skeggs, 83, has been dressing the same way since he was a teenager

British eccentricity is dying out when we need it more than ever

Dressed in a houndstooth suit, bowling shoes and a bolero hat, 83-year-old George Skeggs certainly stands out in a crowd. He is also a London institution. However, in an age of algorithms, branding and bland conformity, might “Soho George” be the last of his kind? Abigail Buchanan reports.

Continue reading

 

Why thousands of house sales across Britain risk falling apart

Mike Cox was on the brink of buying his first home when he was told there was a problem. The collapse of his council’s land search system meant property sales were made all but impossible. Sixty miles away, in Hampshire, an almost identical issue had occurred a few months earlier. With nearly 1,000 transactions across the two councils affected, there are growing fears that others could be susceptible to the same chaos.
Continue reading

Brick factory closes after 139 years as housebuilding collapses

 

Seize the day

Six foods that raise your heart attack risk (and what to eat instead)

How much harm could a glass of orange juice or a fruit-flavoured yogurt really do to your health? A fair amount it seems, according to a new study which showed that people who ate the most preservatives – often added to ultra-processed foods – faced a 22 per cent increased risk of heart attack and stroke. Here Telegraph Health recruits the help of Dr Federica Amati to reveal the main offenders and what to swap them for.
Continue reading

 

Reviews of the week

Admit it, art snobs: Winston Churchill was a surprisingly decent painter

Painting of Koutoubia Mosque, Marrakech, by Winston Churchill

Koutoubia Mosque, Marrakech, 1943, painted by Winston Churchill and later given to US president Franklin D Roosevelt

Exhibition

Winston Churchill: The Painter
The Wallace Collection

★★★☆☆

Although Winston Churchill didn’t take up painting as a hobby until he was 40 years old, to distract himself following the disastrous Dardanelles campaign of 1915, he became besotted with the medium. By the time of his death aged 90, he had produced more than 500 oil paintings. A new Wallace Collection show suggests he was a more accomplished artist than critics have long insisted.
Until Nov 26 (wallacecollection.org)
Read Alastair Sooke’s review here

Theatre

Care
Young Vic

★★★★★

Care is a profoundly moving, beautifully acted portrait of life and death in a nursing home for the elderly. It’s the best thing writer-director Alexander Zeldin, 41, has done, which is saying something since his previous plays comprise a damning dossier about society’s most vulnerable. Yet he emphasises the complex humanity behind the topical headline agendas; and does so magnificently here.
Until July 11 (youngvic.org)
Read Dominic Cavendish’s review here

Film

The Mandalorian and Grogu

★★☆☆☆

Disney has been trying to turn Star Wars into another Marvel-like franchise for some time. In that respect The Mandalorian and Grogu is a roaring success, insofar as it feels like a skippable new episode in a soap opera you lost interest in years ago. Unfortunately, most of this feature-length escapade for Pedro Pascal’s masked bounty hunter and his infant sidekick is hopeless.
Read Robbie Collin’s review here

 

Your say

A divisive botanical beverage

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...
I spent many years automatically accepting gin and tonics – before lunch, before dinner, at parties, at my grandparents’ house – before I finally asked myself: “Do I actually like this stuff?” It felt subversive, although of course it shouldn’t have. After all, if most people were offered a big glass of perfume with a wedge of lime floating around in it, they’d have no qualms about turning it down.

I was pleased, anyway, to learn that Evgenia Siokos shares my aversion, and readers have been persuaded by her case against mother’s ruin, whether neat or mixed.


 

One replied: “I agree. G&Ts have an ugly taste, although I do drink them myself due to peer pressure. However, there are also drinks that I think are delicious that others probably find disgusting – white Russians, for example.”


 

Susan Dudley seemed to me to have the right idea: “I am now too old to mix my alcoholic drinks, and I also have less capacity for booze. So, sadly, it’s nothing but Champagne for me.”


 

The drink still has its defenders, of course. Roger Dyer wrote: “I enjoy a G&T in the summer. Here in the United States, we fill a tall glass with ice cubes, then pour in a quality gin, plus a decent tonic, Fever-Tree being my current go-to. Add a chunk of lime, and you are good to go. Also, we keep both the gin and the tonic in our fridges. When it’s in the high 30s outside and humid with it, it needs to be properly cold.”


 

Jimmy Christian agreed that the variety of gin is crucial: “Top choice? Bombay Sapphire export strength, plus Schweppes with a nice squeeze of lime. My father always used to swear by Gordon’s as a useful cleaning fluid. I agree with him: it’s good for that purpose only.”

Are you a gin enthusiast? 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

1897 | The Blackwall Tunnel is officially opened

2013 | Fusilier Lee Rigby is murdered near the Royal Artillery Barracks in Woolwich by two Islamic terrorists, Michael Adebolajo and Michael Adebowale

2017 | Manchester Arena suicide bombing after Ariana Grande concert kills 22 and injures 59

Birthdays: Novak Djokovic (39), Naomi Campbell (56), Morrissey (67)

Plus, in the news today, which reality TV star did the Department for Education invite into its headquarters to have a conversation with Bridget Phillipson?

1. Gemma Collins
2. Joey Essex
3. Maura Higgins
4. Molly-Mae Hague

 

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 BANDAGING. 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

Try 4 months for 25p per month

Save on an All Access Subscription with your email-exclusive offer

 

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