dimanche 10 mai 2026

Starmer faces stalking horse challenge

‘I was blamed for the Everest disaster. Now I’m ready to tell my story’ | Army launches parachute mission to treat rat-virus victim
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Sunday, 10 May 2026

Issue No. 441

Good morning.

Sir Keir Starmer faces a leadership challenge after a Labour MP warned the Cabinet she would move against him tomorrow unless ministers acted first. Catherine West, a former minister, sent Downing Street into a panic when she declared her “stalking horse” ambitions. Camilla Turner, our Sunday Political Editor, reports.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

P.S. Telegraph readers can now enjoy a year’s access for just £1.99 per month. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

‘I was blamed for the Everest disaster. Now I’m ready to tell my story’

The election that entrenched sectarian politics in Britain

Plus, Army launches parachute mission to treat rat-virus victim

Enjoy a whole year for £1.99 per month

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

 

Starmer faces stalking horse leadership challenge

Starmer’s ‘reset’ speech has been overshadowed by Catherine West’s ultimatum

Camilla Turner

Camilla Turner

Sunday Political Editor

 

By late afternoon yesterday, most of the local election results were in. Dire though they were for Labour, Downing Street thought the worst was over and they could now get their heads down and focus on planning for Sir Keir Starmer’s “reset” speech tomorrow.

Shortly after 5pm, the news broke that the Cabinet was being threatened with an ultimatum by one of the Prime Minister’s own backbenchers.

Catherine West, an MP almost no one outside Westminster or her North London constituency had heard of, announced that if no serious leadership contender had launched their bid by Monday morning, she would call their bluff and launch one herself.

Catherine West

Catherine West has been a dedicated Labour supporter since long before her ascension to Parliament

West, a former minister and the MP for Hornsey and Friern Barnet, claimed initially that she had 10 backers for her “stalking horse” bid, falling far short of the 81 she would need to formally trigger a contest.

However, hours after going public with her plan, she said she had already been “inundated” with messages of support from colleagues.

Her initiative provoked a mixed response among Labour MPs, with some praising her as a “hero” while others labelled it “very irresponsible”. Meanwhile, supporters of Andy Burnham were attempting to convince West to abandon her leadership bid less than an hour after she launched it.

It came as the fallout from Labour’s disastrous local election results intensified, with more than 30 Labour MPs publicly calling on Starmer to go by last night.

This report is available only to subscribers.
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The thwarted former minister who could hasten the end of Starmer

 

Local election must-reads

Starmer had just 45 minutes’ warning before the bombshell dropped

Dark horse, stalking horse or lame duck? That’s the question everyone is asking after Catherine West launched her surprise leadership bid yesterday in an attempt to flush out other candidates, writes Tony Diver, our Political Editor. Her decision has thrown the debate over Starmer’s leadership into disarray, and threatens to overshadow his “reset” speech tomorrow. Ministers, government aides and MPs are working out what comes next. It’s going to be messy.

For subscribers only

 

Candidates and supporters of the Oldham Group of independent councillors celebrate winning seats at this week’s local election

The election that entrenched sectarian politics in Britain

A smashed Ferrari in Oldham and a furious showdown in a Birmingham café offered glimpses this week into the fraught world of Muslim-first candidates using Gaza as a rallying cry, write Ed Cumming and Michael Murphy. Independent Muslim candidates say they’re focusing on the issues their supporters care about, but others fear councils are being “hijacked”.

Continue reading

 

Kemi Badenoch speaks to the media outside Westminster Town Hall

Tory turnaround shows the ‘Kemi effect’ may be starting to work

Conservatives have hailed the “Kemi effect” for their victories in areas such as Barnet and Harrow. The Conservative leader’s “honesty” when it comes to confronting the hate marches and tackling anti-Semitism are the key to shoring up support among Jewish voters, insiders believe. Meanwhile, in Westminster and Wandsworth, the Conservatives’ reputation for competent management and low taxation has allowed the party to wrestle these essential seats from Labour.

Continue reading

 

Opinion

Tom Harris Headshot

Tom Harris

Gordon Brown’s return is Starmer’s two-fingered salute to his own party

The appointment is the equivalent of responding to a fire breaking out in your home by landscaping your garden

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Kemi Badenoch</span> Headshot

Kemi Badenoch

The Conservatives’ green shoots of recovery are clear. Judge us by what we do next

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Nigel Farage</span> Headshot

Nigel Farage

Reform has shattered the world view of the Westminster bubble

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news


Your sport briefing

Daniel Dubois connects with the head of Fabio Wardley

Daniel Dubois connects with the head of Fabio Wardley

Weekend reads

‘I was blamed for the Everest disaster. I’m ready to tell my story’

 
 

‘What began as long client lunches spiralled into full-blown addiction, until I finally realised how out of control I’d become’

‘I was drunk at work every day for 15 years’

Magazine launches, long lunches in Soho and nights that never seemed to end – from the outside, my life looked glamorous, writes Jamie Klingler. In reality, I was unravelling behind a haze of blackouts, shame and exhaustion. Then, in one moment, everything changed, and I decided to become sober. This is what happened.

Continue reading

 

Army launches parachute mission to remote British island to treat rat-virus victim

17 new beach huts have been built on Southwick Beach, West Sussex

As Tristan da Cunha has no airstrip, the team flew from Ascension Island in an RAF transport plane

Army medics have parachuted into Tristan da Cunha, the world’s most remote inhabited island, to treat a British resident with hantavirus. With no airstrip, clinicians were dropped in by RAF aircraft as passengers aboard the MV Hondius prepared for quarantine on their return home. The outbreak, linked to three deaths, has triggered a vast international operation, with Spain sealing off the cruise ship behind a one-mile exclusion zone as it limps towards Tenerife.

Continue reading

 

Your Sunday

‘We moved our family from Kent to Singapore – here’s what life in South-East Asia is really like’

Lydia Elder, 36, and her family swapped Kent for Singapore in the middle of the Covid-19 pandemic

While the timing of their move to Singapore at the height of the pandemic was “far from ideal”, the Elder family are happily settled and looking towards a future in the city-state. In the latest instalment of our family abroad series, they explain how they grappled with competition for world-class schools, found a home and adapted to the tropical climate.

Continue reading

 

Devil’s Advocate

Londoners are nicer than the rest of the country

Londoners cartoon
Jack Rear

Jack Rear

Senior Lifestyle Writer

 

Growing up in rural Lancashire, we didn’t have much but at least we knew we were good, honest people; the type who said “hello” to those we passed in the street, who’d offer a helping hand to strangers, who’d look out for each other.

Not like those abominable Londoners, the lowest of the low. They didn’t say “hello” to people on the street, they’d avert their eyes if you looked at them on the bus, they didn’t even know their neighbours! Imagine! The degeneracy!

A couple of decades later, the shoe is on the other foot. Having lived in the Big Smoke for close to 10 years, I’m now the Londoner I once loathed.

That loathing persists. Anywhere I travel in Britain, I’ll hear some variation on the line: “I couldn’t live there – everyone is so obnoxious.”

This is not true.

I understand why your experiences in the capital might lead you to think Londoners are rude. It’s the same reason the French say Parisians are rude, and Americans say New Yorkers are rude: you are visiting and we are living here.

While you’re struggling to navigate the Tube, I’m trying to get to work. While you’re casually wandering to the museums, I’m late to a meeting. You stop me to ask for directions, and I’m mentally calculating whether you’re about to proselytise to me, try to sell tickets for the open-top bus or beg me for cash. You’re on holiday, I’m in work mode.

Being busy isn’t the same as being rude, though, is it?

When I think of really rude behaviour, I consider calculated offences. Asking someone how much money they make is rude. Making aggressive conjectures about a stranger’s politics is boorish. Sneering at the way people pronounce words and parroting them is uncouth. Describing your hatred for the place a person comes from within earshot is disrespectful.

You don’t really encounter that kind of passive-aggression in London. Over the course of daily life, I meet people with so many backgrounds that I’m largely indifferent. So you make loads of money, so you dress in a particular fashion, so you hold certain views – who cares? There are plenty of other people around. If I don’t like it I’ll move along, it’s a waste of time to stress about it.

I do encounter this genuine rudeness elsewhere in the country. Everywhere from Preston to Penzance, and particularly in other big cities like Manchester and Edinburgh. It often comes from those who seem to believe they’ve scored a moral victory by virtue of not living in London.

Perhaps the view that Londoners are rude has become so entrenched that people are primed to throw the first punch. Perhaps it’s that relationships are less ephemeral and they want to get the wariness out of the way sooner, leading to bluntness.

I can rationalise it in a lot of ways. Why am I prepared to extend grace in the face of open hostility? Because I’m a Londoner and taking things on the chin is what we do.

Do you agree with Jack? 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

Flt Lt George Dunn, decorated pilot who flew Halifax and Mosquito bombing raids over industrial Germany

Dunn takes to the skies again at the age of 97, in 2019, in the rear cockpit of a two-seat Spitfire

Flight Lieutenant George Dunn, who has died aged 103, is undoubtedly one of the very last bomber pilots to have survived from the Second World War, and he was highly decorated, with a DFC and a Mention in Despatches, writes Andrew M Brown, our Obituaries Editor.

He flew 44 perilous bombing missions before his 21st birthday. After leaving the RAF in 1947 he returned to his pre-war employer, Pickfords Removals, where he spent the rest of his career quietly working as a branch manager.

Dunn, centre, with his Halifax crew

Dunn (centre) with his Halifax crew

Later in the war, when losses to German air defences were at their highest, Dunn flew long-range raids in Halifax and Mosquito aircraft to destroy enemy industrial centres. He took part in the raid on the secret German rocket site at Peenemünde, on the Baltic coast, which set back the V-1 and V-2 programmes by several months.

He always said he was lucky. His aircraft was never intercepted by a German night fighter, and only once did he have to evade radar-controlled searchlights with a violent corkscrew manoeuvre.

Latterly, Dunn raised almost £100,000 for the RAF Benevolent Fund.

Read his remarkable obituary 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 ACCLAIMED. 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 9 mai 2026

How long can Starmer cling on?

The pitfalls Farage must avoid to get to No 10 | These councils show Britain at its most divided
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Saturday, 9 May 2026

Issue No. 440

Good morning.

As the dust settles on Labour’s disastrous local election results, attention is turning to who will replace Sir Keir Starmer, how and when. Gordon Rayner, our Associate Editor, explains how long he could cling to power. Nick Gutteridge, our Chief Political Correspondent, takes you inside Whitehall, where MPs fear that their party will be doomed if the Prime Minister stays in post.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Telegraph readers can now enjoy a year’s access for just £1.99 per month. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

The pitfalls Farage must avoid to get to No 10

How Labour let a century of control in Wales go up in smoke

Plus, the councils that show Britain at its most divided

Enjoy a whole year for £1.99 per month

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

 

How long can Starmer cling on?

Gordon Rayner

Gordon Rayner

Associate Editor

 

After a terrible set of election results for Labour, Sir Keir Starmer is under increasing pressure to set out a timetable for his departure from Downing Street.

The Prime Minister has insisted he won’t resign and wants to avoid the “chaos” of a leadership election, but it’s increasingly obvious he’s lost his party’s support and can’t carry on much longer. So, what happens now?

If Labour MPs and party members have their way, it seems Andy Burnham, the Mayor of Greater Manchester, will be the next Labour leader and prime minister.

His name is on everyone’s lips and there’s a growing clamour for him to return to Parliament and challenge for the leadership, even from people who were turning their backs on him a matter of months ago. Popular and untainted by the failures of this government, he is seen as the only person with any chance of pulling the party out of its current nosedive.

Local election results

Results as of 06:30, May 9, with 129 of 136 English councils declared

In the immediate future, all eyes are on Wes Streeting, the Health Secretary, who has enough support to force a leadership contest, but not necessarily to win one. He’s reluctant to be the first one over the top as that tactic often backfires, and he would be the underdog were he to face a Left-wing candidate such as Angela Rayner.

As for Rayner herself, she’s still agonising over whether to stand at all, and might prefer to serve as deputy prime minister under a soft-Left Burnham premiership, with Ed Miliband as chancellor. So, unless Streeting throws caution to the wind in the next few days, there’s every possibility the Starmer saga could go on for months.

This analysis is available only to subscribers.
Continue reading

Plus, see the latest results here

Nick Gutteridge

Nick Gutteridge

Chief Political Correspondent

 

As the Prime Minister hunkered down in No 10 last night, some prominent Labour figures broke ranks to tell him it was time to hand over power.

The bitterest and most surprising blow came from Sir Sadiq Khan, who bluntly warned him that his leadership risked driving their party into oblivion. In a late statement, the Mayor of London said Labour’s pummelling in the capital at the hands of the Greens represented an “existential threat” to its very future.

His intervention added to a growing chorus of demands from MPs, including some former loyalists, for Starmer to admit that the game was now up. In unusually candid terms they warned the Prime Minister he could “end the Labour Party”, leaving it “slaughtered” and in a state of “total destruction”.

The bosses of Unison and Unite, two of the biggest Labour-backing unions, also urged Starmer to go, warning that the party faced “oblivion” otherwise.

Last night, most of the Cabinet were rallying around their boss, faithfully pushing out the party line that this was no time for Labour to “turn inwards”.

The rearguard action showed that, despite Labour suffering its worst local election results in history, some support for the embattled Prime Minister still remained.
Read the full story here

Plus, go deeper with our full coverage of the local elections:

Why the election results are bad for Starmer’s leadership rivals

Trump congratulates Swinney as SNP embarks on third decade in power after Labour collapse

 

Local election must-reads

Nigel Farage poses with winning councillors outside a town hall in Romford

The pitfalls Farage must avoid to get to No 10

Reform is the winner, writes Ben Riley-Smith, our Chief Political Commentator. That is the simple takeaway from the English council elections, with Nigel Farage’s party topping seat gains by flipping Tory and Labour strongholds alike. So, does that mean Farage will become prime minister? Not necessarily. Turning his protest party into one of government is still a daunting challenge and not a forgone conclusion. The hurdles are not insurmountable. However, they are a reminder not over-interpret a set of dominant local election results and translate them into general election certainties.

For subscribers only

 

Baroness Morgan of Ely leaves the stage in Ceredigion after losing her seat in the Senedd

How Labour let a century of control in Wales go up in smoke

On a bleak day for Labour, perhaps its most disastrous election result was in Wales, writes Rosa Silverman. Having dominated there for a century, Welsh Labour’s support collapsed, with Plaid Cymru becoming the largest party in the Senedd, followed by Reform. In the bloodbath, Baroness Morgan of Ely made history by becoming the first leader of a government in the UK to lose their seat while in office. She promptly resigned. As one voter told us in Llanelli, capturing the mood of the devolved nation: “We need a change.”

Continue reading

 

The councils that show Britain at its most divided

Map of Britain

Britain fractured last night, writes Ruby Cline. Sir Keir Starmer haemorrhaged hundreds of seats in Labour’s historic heartlands, while Nigel Farage cemented Reform’s meteoric rise. Here are the six hotspots that show the country at its most divided, and give an indication of what’s to come as we crawl towards the next general election.

Continue reading

 

In case you missed it...

Yesterday’s news was dominated by Labour’s dismal performance across England, Scotland and Wales. However, on a day with thousands of contests being decided, some stories might have passed you by. Here is a selection.

• Former model Alex Silby narrowly missed winning Big Brother when he finished third on the reality programme in 2002. However, 24 years later, he tasted success becoming a Reform UK councillor as part of their landslide victory in the London borough of Havering. Elsewhere in the capital, Josh Tapper, once of Gogglebox, was elected as a Labour councillor in Barnet.

Former Stoke City footballer Graham Shaw became a Reform councillor in Newcastle-under-Lyme. Despite his unconventional past, he said voters were willing to “give him a chance” because of frustration with national politics.

Think you can tell a Tory from a Green? That was the question Sam Hamill-Stewart posed to himself when he created an online game in which you have to guess a candidate’s party simply from a headshot. Almost 4m guesses had been made by the time polls closed on Thursday. Green candidates were easiest to spot, correctly guessed by 38 per cent of players, while Lib Dems proved most challenging, accurately picked out by only 15 per cent. If you’ve got a spare moment, you can play here.

In an attempt to drum up support, the Scottish Conservative leader was photographed alongside party activist James McAlpine, who stands at 7ft 2in holding a mock peach-coloured ballot paper. The creative nod to Roald Dahl’s James and the Giant Peach didn’t pay off, with John Swinney, the SNP leader, declaring his party victorious after only seven seats had been called.

 

Opinion

Allison Pearson Headshot

Allison Pearson

Sick of being dismissed as a racist, Essex Man has turned to Reform

Britain’s working class want their country back and are no longer willing to be lectured by a political establishment that despises them

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Camilla Tominey</span> Headshot

Camilla Tominey

Extremists are taking control of swathes of Britain

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">David Frost</span> Headshot

David Frost

The five lessons from these elections all show the British people are furious

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

weekend reads

The (other) 50 best films of all time – a female perspective

Greatest films

Last week, Robbie Collin, our film critic, ignited debate with his list of the 50 greatest films of all time – not least amongst the culture desk’s female staff, who took umbrage at the lack of comedies, romances and musicals. From classics like The Wizard of Oz and Gone With the Wind to modern gems (Clueless, Brokeback Mountain) here is their alternative top 50.

Continue reading

 
Sue Ryan

Sue Ryan tested positive for hantavirus in 2020 following a camping and hiking trip in Colorado

‘I had hantavirus. This is what it’s like’

When I collapsed after what I assumed was Covid, writes Sue Ryan, I discovered I had contracted the rare and potentially deadly hantavirus, the same disease now linked to deaths aboard a cruise ship. I spent days in isolation as fluid filled my lungs and doctors feared the worst. This is how it changed my life, and my habits around the house.
Continue reading

Rat-virus cruise passengers to self-isolate in British hotels

 

Alan Carr: ‘Everyone’s a national treasure now, I’m sick of it’

“There seems to be a renaissance in me,” Alan Carr mused when we met recently, writes Guy Kelly. He came to regret using that word (“such a w---er...”), but it’s true: since winning The Celebrity Traitors, Carr has reached national treasure status – whether he likes it or not. Hilariously incapable of keeping his mouth shut, he’s that rare interviewee who’s everything you hoped for.

Continue reading

 

Your Saturday

 

Diana’s Weekend table

A summer holiday on a plate

Macerated strawberry toasted ice cream sandwich

Diana Henry

Diana Henry

The Telegraph’s award-winning cookery writer

 

I had a very busy weekend last week. People came for lunch on Sunday. I have to tell you that the new perfect time to have people over for a weekend lunch is 4pm: you can still have a lie-in and still get something good on the table just as friends are arriving. This weekend, I don’t want to do anything except cook and eat things that are easy, and embrace the spring and summer vibes that have taken over the garden (it’s messy and unruly, but like a beautiful meadow).

Strawberries. When they first arrive I want them as I did when I was a child, just with double cream or vanilla ice cream, but throughout the season I make things ever more adventurous, eventually ending up baking a French strawberry tart with crème pâtissière. This toasted strawberry and ice cream sandwich is where I am right now. I will only be having half of this, I promise. It is such a treat.

Paccheri pasta with tomato sauce and ricotta

I’m not actually having a summer holiday this year – things just feel too uncertain in all sorts of ways – so I am going to have to go in my head. A good book and a special recipe is the best way to visit Italy or France from your own kitchen table. I had this pasta dish for the first time in Naples about four years ago. You think it’s just pasta with tomato sauce and ricotta, as that’s what it’s called. It sounds straightforward, but the way the ricotta softens some of the tomato sauce, but not all of it, is what this dish is all about. Make the sauce early in the day so you can ask people over for just one dish (if you want) later. For your reading material try Street Fight in Naples by Peter Robb.

Baked ChalkStream trout with fennel butter, leeks and beans

I will be on my own most of the time this summer and fish fillets are one of the easiest ways to enjoy fish just for one. It’s a neat way of eating as there’s no waste, and this recipe for baked trout with fennel butter, leeks and beans can be halved to feed just you. It also works with salmon. If you’re feeling lazy, forget about the beans and just concentrate on the rest.

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

 

Your say

Pricey pints

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 thought I had perfected my expression – a mixture of alarm, indignation and weary resignation – when faced with the bill for a round of drinks in London. With the news that it’s now possible to fork out a preposterous £11 for a pint here, I may need to recalibrate.


 

This development was the theme of Tuesday’s newsletter, and readers have responded with dismay. Russell Payne said: “I clearly recall vowing in my youth that, once beer reached £1 a pint, I would be switching to halves.” Time, perhaps, to make the thimbleful an official measure.


 

“It would have to be a pretty amazing place to pay that,” added Sue and Paul. “The Royal Enclosure at Ascot, perhaps?”

It is still possible, however, to escape pernicious pint inflation – largely by fleeing the capital. They recommend their local, “the Red Lion Inn, Penderyn, a great little pub that also serves fantastic food, on top of a mountain in the Brecon Beacons. It’s £5.50 for Welsh pale ale”.


 

Another reader – one of many – puts in a word for Wetherspoons: “I used to be a daily drinker. Now that I am on a pension, it’s the only place I can afford on a regular basis. My local Spoons charges £2.35 a pint, Monday to Wednesday.”


 

I’ve also enjoyed reading about your valiant efforts to assist Britain’s imperilled hedgehog population, the subject of yesterday’s Your Say.

One reader explained: “We have at least seven hogs coming to our garden every night for a buffet of cat crunchies and calciworms, plus a dish of fresh rainwater. Several did not bother to hibernate at all last winter, but they have cosy houses and a big igloo full of hay to rest in.”


 

S Carr added: “I have had hedgehogs in my garden for many years. There is a pecking order for the nightly feed. If anyone is at the bowl when ‘big daddy’ turns up, they should brace themselves. They will be shoved out of the way until he has had his fill. I then refill for the rest of them.”

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

Gather round for the latest instalment of my Saturday quiz.

1. On this date in 1671, Thomas Blood arrived at the Tower of London dressed as a clergyman. What was his intention?

2. Captain Blood (1935) was the first of eight films to star Errol Flynn opposite which glamorous co-star?

3. Captain Mainwaring led the Home Guard in which fictional town?

4. Which Guards regiment is the oldest continuously serving regiment in the British Army?

5. Sir William Coldstream (1908-1987) was eminent in which pursuit?

You can find the answers at the end of the newsletter.

Plus, can you tackle our new daily puzzle? Scroll down to see if you got the questions right – and play for free on our website and app.

 

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 TIPTOEING. 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. To steal the Crown Jewels
  2. Olivia de Havilland
  3. Walmington-on-Sea
  4. Coldstream Guards
  5. Artist
 

1% Club answers:

  1. Triangle
  2. Tennis
  3. 11
 

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