mercredi 4 février 2026

Why Britain’s top tradesman is quitting the country

No 10 accused of Epstein and Mandelson cover-up | ‘A fling with an older man was one of my best decisions’
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Wednesday, 4 February 2026

Issue No. 346

Good morning.

Britain is pushing away its talent. The country’s top tradesman is moving abroad for work because, he says, his business has become untenable under Labour.

Elsewhere, the fallout from the Epstein files continues apace. It has emerged Lord Mandelson plotted with the paedophile to oust then prime minister Gordon Brown, the former Labour leader has separately accused No 10 of a cover-up and police are reviewing claims a woman was trafficked to Royal Lodge for sex with Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try one year of The Telegraph for £30, including all the articles in this newsletter. If you are already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Are you on track to become a pension millionaire?

‘Will I get dementia like my dad? I took a test to find out’

A million job losses: Brace for Britain’s driverless car revolution

Free thinkers wanted.

Discuss and debate today’s biggest talking points, directly with our journalists.

One year for £30.

 

Why Britain’s top tradesman is quitting the country

Martin Daly, Screwfix’s Tradesperson of the Year, is leaving Britain for Switzerland

Benedict J Smith

Benedict J Smith

Money Writer

 

Four months ago, builder Martin Daly should have been enjoying the high point of his career.

He had just been crowned Screwfix’s Top Tradesperson of the Year. His small business in Scotland was doing well after more than a decade of hard work. Despite being just 30, he had helped a small army of apprentices find their feet in the construction industry.

However, Rachel Reeves’s decision to raise employers’ National Insurance contributions in her maiden Budget piled on pressure at a time when costs were already rising.

Daly had been feeling for a while that he would be better off abroad, and when an email arrived from a company in Switzerland offering a job fitting high-end kitchens, he jumped at the opportunity.

“In Britain, the more scale a business has, it seems the more you get punched,” says Daly, who lives in Motherwell, Scotland. “Every time you make good money, you feel as if somebody takes it off you.

“It’s draining – not just for myself but everybody.

“In Switzerland, it’s a much better way of life. You’re not taxed to death. They want to look after you, they want you to be part of their society and build and grow.”

As Labour pursues its ambitious goal of building 1.5 million homes by 2029, its own policies are driving away the very people who can make the Government’s vision a reality.​​
Continue reading

 

Gordon Brown accuses No 10 of Mandelson cover-up

Jeffrey Epstein and Lord Mandelson on a yacht in an image released in the document cache last week

Ben Riley-Smith

Ben Riley-Smith

Political Editor

 

Gordon Brown has dragged Britain’s most senior civil servant into the Mandelson scandal. Lord Mandelson, who resigned from the House of Lords yesterday, was Brown’s business secretary and de-facto deputy prime minister in 2009 and 2010.

During this time emails released in the Epstein files appear to show Lord Mandelson passing on market-sensitive information to the convicted paedophile. The disclosures included details regarding plans for a multibillion-pound EU bailout, Brown’s resignation and the potential sale of government land and property.

On Tuesday, Brown said he had given “relevant” information to the police and accused Lord Mandelson of an “inexcusable and unpatriotic act”. But he also appeared to question why Sir Chris Wormald, the Cabinet Secretary, had not launched his own investigation when approached by the former prime minister to do so last September.

Gordon Brown and Peter Mandelson at The Labour Party Conference in 2009

Lord Mandelson announced he would resign from the House of Lords. Just hours later, the Metropolitan Police announced a criminal investigation over the leaked email claims. As the row continues to dominate the debate in Westminster, Downing Street chief of staff Morgan McSweeney is under growing scrutiny, having proposed Lord Mandelson as Sir Keir Starmer’s ambassador to the US.

Labour will face further pressure on Wednesday in Parliament, when the Conservatives will try to force the publication of messages between McSweeney and Lord Mandelson.

As for now, the row rumbles on...
Read the full story

‘Bye bye, smelly’: How Epstein and Mandelson plotted against Gordon Brown

Police review claims Epstein trafficked woman to Britain for sex with Andrew

 

Opinion

Allison Pearson Headshot

Allison Pearson

When I met Peter Mandelson, I knew straight away he was rotten

It defies belief that Keir Starmer appointed such an obviously amoral man to be Britain’s ambassador to the United States

Continue reading

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

Victoria Moore

At last, Britain is turning its back on Dry January

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Greg Dickinson</span> Headshot

Greg Dickinson

Asian and American tourists have ruined Europe’s most beautiful cities

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 


In other news

A removal van leaves Royal Lodge as Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor moves out

Your essential reads

Sharon Walker with her father, Bob, who died aged 83 after being diagnosed with Lewy body dementia

‘Will I get dementia like my dad? I took a test to find out’

If you had the option of taking a test that showed your dementia risk, would you want to know? After witnessing my father’s long, torturous battle with the illness, I wasn’t sure, writes Sharon Walker, Health Features Editor. What changed my mind was the thought that the test could help me get ahead of damaging inflammation before it took hold. Here’s what happened when I got my results and the steps we can all take to protect our brain health.

Continue reading

 

Trans athletes have no advantage over women, study claims

What advantage do trans athletes have over women? None, according to a new study published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine. The research claims there is no evidence “to justify blanket bans” on trans athletes taking part in women’s sport. However, experts and campaigners have already begun to tear into the study’s major flaws.

Continue reading

 

Rowan Pelling (left) with her friend Sarah

‘A fling with an older man was one of the best decisions I ever made’

The actress Patsy Kensit has revealed she had a passionate affair with the Sixties icon Terence Stamp when she was 23 and he was 30 years her senior. Conventional wisdom says this kind of imbalance is a bad thing. However, Rowan Pelling, who herself had a much older boyfriend when she was in her early 20s, believes age-gap relationships can work well in the right circumstances. Christopher, she says, was intelligent, entertaining and in possession of an unflagging libido. Many dating truisms, she warns, are just not true.

Continue reading

 

A million job losses: Brace for Britain’s driverless car revolution

Uber’s chief executive predicts driving will soon become a hobby akin to riding a horse. However, for Britain’s one million professional drivers, the threat is existential. With “platooning” lorries and robo-taxis arriving in London, Tim Wallace assesses a future where the property market is upended and public transport collapses.

Continue reading

 

Hollywood’s long, toxic love affair with plastic surgery

Left: Marilyn Monroe (then known as Norma Jeane Baker) in 1946; right: the star in 1953

Nips and tucks are almost as old as Hollywood itself. Long before Botox and Ozempic took over Tinseltown, classic film stars including Marilyn Monroe, Joan Crawford and Gary Cooper signed up for all manner of grisly procedures – and the results weren’t always pretty. Ella Dorn takes us inside the world of a Hollywood obsession that only seems to be growing.

Continue reading

 

The battle to become Britain’s top policeman

Last week, Shabana Mahmood, the Home Secretary, announced the creation of a new National Police Service. The force will handle the most serious and complex crimes and is effectively destined to become the “British FBI”. However, inside the selection process a battle of ideologies and methods is raging. Whoever ends up taking the reins will become the most senior police officer in England and Wales and define the role for years to come. Danny Shaw looks at the runners and riders.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

Are you on track to become a pension millionaire?

Pension millionaire

Retiring with a seven-figure pension isn’t as out of reach as it might seem. Our calculator can show whether you’re on track to hit your first million. Simply enter your salary, age, contributions and pot value into the tool, and it will reveal your trajectory. If it’s not looking good, you can make adjustments to see how even small changes could affect your wealth in the future.

Continue reading

 

The morning quiz

Iguanas


In which US state did it begin “raining iguanas” after a cold snap caused them to freeze and fall from trees?

 

Your say

Working out the gym

On Sunday in the Devil’s Advocate column, Alice Wilkinson, Deputy Head of Health Features, confessed to hating gyms with a passion. Today, she’s standing in for Orlando Bird to pull out the best of your opinions and stories.

Alice writes…
Thank you so much for responding to my column. It’s heartening to know that I’m far from alone in loathing gyms and I’m thankful to the few of you who pointed out that I might be missing something.


 

Vivien Plews agrees with me that the modern gym experience “is more like punishment.” I wrote about how, unlike gyms which flatten your workout to a game of gains and losses, exercising outdoors gives you a 360 degree experience.

“That is so very important,” says Vivien. She values “being aware in the moment, not mindlessly pushing on. At 79 years old, a 15-minute swim and a dog walk does the trick and I love both.”


 

However, it seems that gyms have more of a social scene than I have given them credit for. Thank you, Sandy Combe for alerting me: “In my 20s I decided going to the gym was boring and expensive. However, now I am in my mid 70s and have had several quite major operations.

“I needed to do something to get myself moving again but I’d lost my confidence and some balance. In the gym, I’ve made good friends and I’m trying to gain some fitness. I think if I did have a mishap or a fall, then at least there are friends and staff in the gym that might help.”


 

Tony T suggests I simply haven’t met my gym crew yet: “I absolutely disagree with Alice! My local gym is a gem. I’m in my (just) late 60s and the place is a small haven to see gym ‘mates,’ some of whom have become friends. The banter is glorious…”


 

Deborah Grant is on my side. She thinks the popularity of gyms is “a sign of just how lazy many have become in other aspects of their lives.”

Helpfully, she shares some ideas to try: “How about walking with pace and purpose when you have to go somewhere? Take the stairs and seek out hills up which you can power-walk. Do the cleaning at home vigorously, get down on your hands and knees. One can always do push-ups, chin-ups, squats, and suchlike at home, with no financial cost. It’s what I do.

“Some of the biggest physical and mental health benefits to be had from recreational exercise aren’t realised in gyms indoors. These include a vitamin D and endorphin boost from simply being outdoors in nature, an immune system boost from getting cold – especially in cold water – and the social benefits of team sports and exercise groups.”

Perhaps it’s time I gave gyms another chance. What do you think? Send your responses 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.

 

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 PlusWord, Sorted, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was MOTIVATOR. 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 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.

mardi 3 février 2026

Lord Cameron: Starmer is destroying schools

How to increase sleep for longevity | Inside the cult of Steven Bartlett
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Tuesday, 3 February 2026

Issue No. 345

Good morning.

The schools bill returns to the House of Lords today, and in an exclusive article for The Telegraph, Lord Cameron makes a rare foray into domestic politics with some harsh words for Sir Keir Starmer. You can read his column below.

Elsewhere, cancer cases are on the rise among women, but not men. Laura Donnelly, our Health Editor, reports on the alarming numbers and the Government’s plan to tackle the issue.

Finally, we have all the latest from the Epstein files.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try one year of The Telegraph for £30, including all the articles in this newsletter. If you are already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

The 3-2-1 trick to increase sleep for longevity

‘The three-month plan that fixed my brain fog, anxiety and fatigue’

Is Weetabix actually healthy?

Hard work should pay.

Unlock quality journalism that champions free enterprise.

One year for £30.

 

Lord Cameron: Starmer is taking a spite-laden wrecking ball to schools

Lord Cameron has accused Labour of taking a “spite-laden wrecking ball” to British education, writes Poppy Wood, Education Editor.

Writing for The Telegraph in a rare intervention, the former prime minister becomes the latest politician to attack Labour’s flagship schools bill, as it returns to the House of Lords today.

The bill’s shake-up of academies would “systematically dismantle” reforms brought in by Sir Tony Blair that have driven up education standards over the past few decades, he said.

Under the plans, academies would be forced to follow the national curriculum for the first time and end their freedom to recruit expert teachers who lack official qualifications, such as retired university lecturers.

The Tory peer also took aim at Labour’s decision to axe dozens of free schools, including a planned sixth form college in Middlesbrough spearheaded by his alma mater, Eton College.

What’s behind these measures? A Government intent on “curbing aspiration, curtailing excellence, levelling down and denying so many children the opportunities they deserve”, according to the former prime minister.

David Cameron

David Cameron

 

“You were the future once.” It’s just over 20 years since I looked across the House of Commons at Prime Minister Tony Blair and said those words. Some people remember the occasion – my first-ever outing at Prime Minister’s Questions as leader of the Opposition.

Quite understandably, hardly anyone remembers the context. I was offering to support Blair’s education reforms, principally creating more independent academy schools within the state sector. I dared him to be bolder and more radical because, with our support, he could ignore the blockers in the trade union movement and on his own back benches. (That day he focused on the past; I told him to think about the future – and that’s where the soundbite came from.) In the event, we backed his bill and some vital changes to schools started to take place.

Fast forward two decades and we see a totally different picture. Not just how rare it is to see political parties working together for the common good, but the totally destructive attitude of Keir Starmer’s Government to the education reforms that Tony Blair started and under which I put rocket boosters.
Continue reading

Read the full details of the story here

 

Surge in women’s cancers but not men’s

Laura Donnelly

Laura Donnelly

Health Editor

 

Cancer is surging among women under 50, with a 16 per cent rise since 2000, without any such rise for men.

This is according to a startling report by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) analysing cancer trends across Europe from 2000 to 2022.

The situation for men can be explained by competing trends: while prostate and skin cancer are on the rise, lung and stomach cancer are falling, largely thanks to the demise of smoking. As a result, trends look stable across Europe.

For women, the situation looks quite different, particularly in some of the most common cancers: bowel, breast and skin.

The numbers are bleak on home shores too, with other data showing Britain’s poor record on cancer survival from late diagnosis has resulted in us shamefully lagging behind our international peers.

Tomorrow, however, ministers will publish a National Cancer Plan setting out measures to improve diagnosis and survival rates from a disease that will affect one in two of us.

This will only succeed if scientists make far more progress understanding the factors such as genetics, diet and environment that are driving the rise of cancer rates among young women.
Continue reading

 

Opinion

Sean Thomas Headshot

Sean Thomas

There are no nice areas left for Londoners to live in

A pervasive sense of decline and disorder lingers over the capital

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Robbie Collin  </span> Headshot

Robbie Collin

Hollywood’s ‘race police’ are ruining cinema

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Michael Mosbacher</span> Headshot

Michael Mosbacher

Free potatoes are wasted on the Germans

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 


In other news

Donald Trump plans to build a 250ft-tall arch in Washington DC

Your essential reads

Mandelson Blower cartoon

‘Starmer, Blair and Brown all turned a blind eye to Mandelson’s flaws. They too are disgraced’

We always knew Lord Mandelson was bedazzled by wealth and driven by a sociopathic need to run with the impossibly rich, writes Suzanne Moore. But the latest revelations of his sordid friendship with Jeffrey Epstein – forwarding internal government information while serving in Gordon Brown’s Cabinet – go deeper than mere vanity. Time and again, Labour leaders ignored every warning sign to rehabilitate the Prince of Darkness. The electorate has been utterly disrespected.
Continue reading

Plus, don’t miss Tim Stanley’s wry take on the scandal:

“Waiting to fly to Berlin,” Mandy once typed, “Upset cos lost the number of the Russian guy I knew there so no fun (again) for Petey”. How sad. He also said he was “desp[erate]” for a Cuban American. Please God let him mean a cigar, not Marco Rubio.

“You are a controversial figure,” Epstein messaged in history’s first recorded instance of a pot calling the kettle, “the prince of darkness.”
Continue reading the sketch here

 

Why you should prioritise sleep over diet and exercise. Start with this 3-2-1 trick

Dr Steven Lu, a longevity doctor, often sees patients who believe they are doing everything “right”. They eat well and exercise daily, yet still feel drained and unwell. In many of these cases, sleep is the missing piece of the puzzle. In fact, Dr Lu believes a good night’s rest is essential to a healthy lifestyle. He encourages patients to follow the “3-2-1 protocol”, a set of rules that focuses on limiting your eating, drinking and screen time before bed. Here are more of his tips for better sleep and overall health.

Continue reading

 

Inside the cult of Steven Bartlett, the UK’s answer to Joe Rogan

When Steven Bartlett was expelled from his Plymouth comprehensive, his teachers could not have foreseen his global success. Bartlett’s Diary of a CEO podcast has more than three million daily listeners and seemed, ostensibly, like a sane voice in a world of bumptious podcast “bros”. But now Bartlett is accused of not pushing back against extreme views and misinformation from guests. As one critic puts it: “[It’s] incel propaganda dressed up as intellectual debate.”

Continue reading

 

How fat jabs could make your holiday cheaper

Weight-loss jabs might be about to deliver the unexpected perk of cheaper holidays. That is the suggestion made in a recent headline-grabbing research paper looking at how our embrace of fat jabs might affect the aviation sector. Why? Because lighter passengers mean less money spent on fuel, and, potentially, lower airfares. Robert Jackman weighs up the chances of it coming to pass.

Continue reading

 

Marius Borg Høiby is the son of Crown Princess Mette-Marit, whose husband, Prince Haakon, will become Norway’s next king

Rape trial threatens the future of Norway’s royal family

Compared with the tribulations of the House of Windsor, Norway’s royal family has led a fairly quiet life. All that will change today, when Marius Borg Høiby, the 29-year-old son of the Crown Princess of Norway, stands trial in Oslo on four counts of rape, among dozens of other alleged offences. It is arguably the largest scandal ever faced by Norway’s otherwise understated, low-key royal family, and has been exacerbated by revelations over the weekend that the Princess had a warm relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

‘The three-month plan that fixed my brain fog, anxiety and fatigue’

Rosamund Dean (left) with Kate Rowe-Ham, founder of Owning Your Menopause, a strength-led lifestyle programme

After surviving cancer, Rosamund Dean couldn’t understand why she still felt terrible long after her treatment finished, with feelings of brain fog and fatigue persisting even after she’d physically recovered. In fact, chemotherapy had triggered a “crash menopause” and sent her hormones into freefall, with distressing symptoms hitting like a ton of bricks. Determined to take control of her health, Rosamund signed up to a three-month diet and exercise plan claiming to reduce day-to-day menopause symptoms. Here’s how she got on.

Continue reading

Below are two more helpful articles for you this morning:

 

Travel diary

10 waterfalls to see in your lifetime

Chris Moss

Chris Moss

Destination Expert

 

There are few sights more thrilling than a waterfall. Their hyperactive crashing and thundering makes them as suggestive of geological drama as volcanoes – but a lot safer. So which should be top of your holiday wish list? Here are 10 of the most spectacular, and the best way to visit them.

My picks include epic Victoria Falls – the “smoke that thunders” – arguably Africa’s most celebrated natural wonder, reached by David Livingstone in 1855. There are also lesser-known options such as Nong Khiaw, a collection of 100 drops in the jungle of Laos that can be explored on a trekking circuit.

There is also one British entry on our list, so you needn’t travel too far to be wowed.

Continue reading

 

The morning quiz


A 91-year-old former sporting champion has made a winning comeback – 40 years after his last competition. In which sport did he win a gold medal?

 

Your say

Justice for audiobooks

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...
There has been much debate about the Queen’s recent suggestion that listening to audiobooks counts as reading. My instinctive response to this was one of scepticism – but then, when it comes to books, my habits are perhaps perversely old-fashioned. I insist on toiling to the end of every one I pick up, and I must always read from a hard copy (I never took to Kindles either). The result – at the moment, at least – is that I don’t manage to get through nearly as many books as I’d like. Untouched volumes glare at me from every shelf in my flat. Is it time for me to grit my teeth and take out an Audible subscription?


 

Danny Harvey made a very reasonable point: “Listening to a book has to be far better than nothing at all.”


 

Helen Townshend added: “Audiobooks do have a place, and may well lead people to reading.”


 

I think Ian Lander was right, though, to argue that “the use of audiobooks is an act of listening, which is completely different”. Some things are simply better read. I find that comic novels, for instance, are nearly always funnier on the page.


 

Catherine Kidson discussed the merits of audiobooks in an educational setting: “One of the joys of being a primary school teacher is helping pupils to develop a genuine love of books. In my classes, I often play an audiobook, while each child follows the text in their own copy. This is particularly valuable for children who find reading challenging, as it builds up their confidence, while keeping them fully engaged with the story.”


 

Alan Belk wasn’t so sure about this: “When my teacher was reading to us, he would frequently stop and explain the plot, nuances, unusual spellings, alliteration and so on, and ask questions to make sure that we had not been daydreaming. This was teaching with amazing passion, resulting in better learning.”

Is the Queen right about audiobooks? Send your responses 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.

 

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 PlusWord, Sorted, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was ROUTINELY. 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 here.

We have sent you this email because you have either asked us to or because we think it will interest you.

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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.