samedi 28 mars 2026

Britain’s immigration addiction

All the tax changes and price rises coming in April | Trump’s war in Iran puts US where China wants it
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Saturday, 28 March 2026

Issue No. 398

Good morning.

Reducing immigration may be politically popular, but it could cause the public sector to collapse. Ben Butcher, our Data Editor, reveals why Britain is finally about to face the true consequences of failing to train a British-born workforce.

Elsewhere, Lauren Davidson, our Executive Money Editor, walks you through all the financial changes that await you in April, and how you can protect your money.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try a whole year of our journalism for just £25 in our Spring Sale. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Trump’s war in Iran puts US where China wants it

The one item my teenage self couldn’t live without

Plus, how inclusive Iceland succumbed to ‘trans madness’

Spring Sale: A whole year for just £25

Enjoy full access to our free-thinking journalism for less than 50p per week

 

For decades, the public sector has relied on immigrant workers. Now, it faces collapse

Ben Butcher

Ben Butcher

Data Editor

 

Immigration is falling quickly. Having reached a peak of almost one million in 2023, net migration has now plummeted to 204,000 in the latest annual figures. This decline is expected to continue as a growing number of “tough-on-immigration” policies kick in.

Politically, at least, this decline had to happen: the rise of Reform having sent shockwaves through the establishment. However, a sustained reversal will also highlight the follies of almost three decades of government policy. For years, mass migration has been the “sticking plaster” for dire recruitment and retention in the public sector – a tactic which started with Tony Blair and continued right up to the “Boriswave” a quarter of a century later.

The result is a public sector hugely reliant on foreign labour – from doctors to teachers to HMRC call handlers – which now must either be wholly rethought in a low-immigration environment or face collapse.

To see just how dramatic this situation is, The Telegraph has carried out a sector-by-sector audit of state services and their reliance on immigrant workers, highlighting the severity of this crisis, and revealing just how difficult it will be to fix.

This essay is available to subscribers only.
Continue reading

 

All the tax changes and price rises coming in April

Lauren Davidson

Lauren Davidson

Executive Money Editor

 

It’s April 1 next week, but this is no joking matter. The new month brings with it a cacophony of financial changes that only a fool would ignore.

First, the good news: the typical household’s energy bills will fall by seven per cent, or £117 a year, from Wednesday due to the reduction in the energy price cap. However, this drop is likely to be short-lived. Oil price shocks from the Iran war are predicted to push the cap from £1,641 to £1,801 in July. Shop around for a cheaper fixed-term deal and lock in before the summer.

Elsewhere, most costs are going up from April. Most council tax bills will rise by 4.9 per cent, which is £111 for an average Band D house. Use our calculator to see how much more you’ll pay. Also going up next week are water bills, car taxes, mobile phone and broadband prices and the cost of a TV licence.

Hot on the heels of price rise day comes the start of the new tax year on April 6, which will also leave most people lighter of pocket. Farms, family businesses and Aim-listed shares will incur more inheritance tax, dividend taxes will rise by two pence in the pound and the dreaded Making Tax Digital finally arrives for sole traders and landlords with more than £50,000 of income (find the best software to use here).

Fret not, for you still have time to act to protect your money. Don’t miss out on the essential tips in these guides.
Read our full April guide

12 ways to maximise your tax-free allowances before April 6

Best cash Isas: Today’s latest rates

The 25 best funds for your Isa – picked by our experts

 

Opinion

Matthew Lynn Headshot

Matthew Lynn

Bosses are right to boycott Reeves’s show trials

Declining invitations to Downing Street in the current climate is absolutely the correct decision

Continue reading

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

Charles Moore

You can’t just Google a fix for the BBC crisis – it needs to find a proper editor

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Lewis Page</span> Headshot

Lewis Page

No, Mr President, the Royal Navy’s aircraft carriers are not ‘toys’

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

 

weekend reads

Trump’s war puts the US where China wants it

Chinese troops march during a parade marking the 80th anniversary of victory over Japan and the end of the Second World War

With every missile the US launches in Iran, concern is growing among its allies in Asia, writes Allegra Mendelson, our Asia Correspondent. What was a distant and confined conflict is now having repercussions on the Western security umbrella across the continent. It is a development that will be secretly welcomed in the halls of Beijing, experts told me.
For subscribers only

Trump wants ‘pay to play’ Nato

 

Michael Grade said the corporation’s handling of its recent woes was ‘unforgivable’

Michael Grade: ‘The BBC can’t go asking for more and more money, it’s just not on’

As the only person to have headed up Channel 4, the BBC and ITV, you could argue Michael Grade is better placed than anyone to talk about how to run a public service broadcaster. The outgoing chairman of Ofcom tells Anita Singh that he’s not impressed by the BBC and how it has dealt with allegations of bias, and admits he feels no sympathy for Tim Davie, the chairman who was forced to resign.

Continue reading

 

Were you devoted to your Walkman? Did you buy every issue of Smash Hits? Telegraph writers share their adolescent prized possessions

The one item my teenage self couldn’t live without

Many of us have standout memories from our teenage years: a first kiss or heartbreak, a formative holiday or dreaded exams. Which singular item would you choose to represent your own adolescence? With the announcement of a new Museum of Youth Culture opening in London, Telegraph writers select the items they would submit, from Smash Hits magazine to film cameras.

Continue reading

 

Icelander Ina Steinke told Julie Bindel that she feared free speech was under threat in her country

How inclusive Iceland succumbed to ‘trans madness’

Once a beacon of progress, Iceland has adopted an authoritarian approach to gender politics, writes Julie Bindel. Those who don’t agree that it’s safe for children to change sex are ostracised, or worse. I spoke to citizens who are terrified for the future, and fear the encroaching indoctrination. This is a cautionary tale for other countries, including our own.

Continue reading

 

Britain’s brewing habits have become a surprisingly revealing marker of taste

What your coffee maker says about you

Britons now drink 98 million cups of coffee a day, turning our brewing habits into a ruthless marker of taste. From the instant coffee die-hards (80 per cent of us still buy it) to the V60 devotees reading Camus, and stovetop aficionados who like their morning brew tasting of “rocket fuel”, Tomé Morrissey-Swan decodes the tribal world of home caffeine.

Continue reading

 

Your Saturday

  • Eat (or don’t) | A versatile store cupboard staple, baked beans are nutritious and provide protein and fibre, but how healthy are they really? We spoke to the experts to find out.
  • Play | The Telegraph has conducted an in-depth study of the class system, to generate an entirely new social order, defined by the British public themselves. Take our test to find out where you fit in.
  • Walk | Our expert has chosen the most scenic South Downs walks, each starting and ending at a characterful country pub. Take in the spring air and try one this weekend.
  • Discuss | England supporters felt crushed by the end of the 2025-26 Ashes series. We’re creating a readers’ manifesto, to right the wrongs of this debacle. How would you fix the Test team? Let us know here.
  • Drink | If you’re trying to save the pennies, finding a decent bottle of wine for under £10 is devilishly difficult. Here are the best six to try.
 

Diana’s Weekend table

Spring shoots

Artichoke, broad bean and shallot salad with saffron dressing

Diana Henry

Diana Henry

The Telegraph’s award-winning cookery writer

 

Spring is in the air, which means I feel compelled to sort out the freezer. I’m not a very tidy person but this time of year means I can’t fight the urge to “sort things out”. It’s a blessing that this urge comes, as it’s rare. I couldn’t believe the number of broad beans in the freezer – packets half emptied, packets with a trickle in the bottom. They have to come out. Even when broad beans are in season I often use frozen because the amount of beans you have to remove from their fur-lined pods to make anything decent takes ages. One of my favourite uses for them is in a simple salad with artichokes, shallots, pine nuts and raisins.

Herbed tomato and onion galette

Many of us have a stash of frozen puff pastry and filo pastry “just in case” it’s needed. I don’t “need” to make this lovely tomato galette but you can’t keep pastry in the freezer for ever. This will make your kitchen feel like summer isn’t far away. The mascarpone layer under the tomatoes is what makes this brilliant. It’s more than a regular tomato tart.

Stir-fried prawns with sugar-snap peas, Thai basil, chilli and lime

I quite often stash a packet of king prawns in the freezer “for a treat”. Then I forget about them. The flavour will deteriorate the longer they are in there so it’s time to whip them out and actually cook a treat. This stir-fry with sugar-snap peas, chilli and lime is the loveliest and simplest dish. Use Thai basil if you can find it, but most vegetables that you can stir fry (green beans, peas, purple sprouting broccoli) will work here. As well as a freezer clear-out you can do a bit of a fridge raid.

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

Happy cooking!

 

Andrew Baker’s Saturday Quiz


Gather round for the latest instalment of my Saturday quiz.

  1. Sir Joseph Bazalgette, who was born on this day in 1819, created in London a “wonder of the industrial world”. What was it?
  2. Which is the only one of the original “seven wonders of the world” cited in the sixteenth-century text Octo Mundi Miracula, to survive today?
  3. What kind of cat does Alice meet in Wonderland?
  4. What is the largest member of the cat family (Felidae)?
  5. Who was the first woman to take her seat as a member of parliament in 1919?
 

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


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was MITHERING. 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. The sewage system
  2. The Great Pyramid of Giza
  3. Cheshire
  4. Tiger
  5. Nancy Astor
 

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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.

vendredi 27 mars 2026

How The Telegraph brought down NS&I boss

Ukraine kills off Putin’s plan to profit from Iran war | The easy switch to boost your Isa
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Friday, 27 March 2026

Issue No. 397

Good morning.

Yesterday, the chief executive of NS&I was forced out over a savings scandal exposed by The Telegraph. Harry Brennan, our Consumer Affairs Editor, takes you inside the story and explains how victims may still lose out on the money they are owed.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try a whole year of our journalism for just £25 in our Spring Sale. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

How Ukraine killed Putin’s plan to make billions from Iran war

Business owners turn on Labour after fresh attack from Reeves

Plus, the easy switch to boost your Isa

Spring Sale: Enjoy one year for £25

Enjoy full access to our free-thinking journalism for less than 50p per week

 

How The Telegraph brought down NS&I boss

Dax Harkins promised a turnaround for the state-backed bank, but failures have spiralled instead

Harry Brennan

Harry Brennan

Consumer Affairs Editor

 

He is gone. Just two days after The Telegraph ran its front page on the chaos that has unfolded at National Savings and Investments (NS&I), Dax Harkins, its chief executive, was forced out.

It was clear he was in trouble from the start.

On Tuesday, we reported that Britain’s savings bank had been accused of short-changing the families of deceased NS&I savers by losing track of investments, delaying payouts and withholding premium bond prizes.

We found that bereaved families had been forced to hire lawyers to obtain cash that was rightfully theirs, incurring thousands in additional costs because of failures at the taxpayer-backed bank dating back years.

It then became clear that the cost of the failings would run into the hundreds of millions, with ministers furious at the bank’s leadership.

It started to look like a scandal.

Then, yesterday, Torsten Bell, the pensions minister, admitted the truth to the British public for the first time. Up to 37,500 people have been denied £476m that is rightfully theirs, in failings dating back to 2008.

There will now be a monumental effort to trace and return the missing cash, with heavy hitters drafted in to sort out the mess.

Yet, there is more bad news. The families of dead savers face the insult of paying inheritance tax after being reunited with their money, while questions remain about whether separate compensation will be tax-free.

More than that, the reputation of Britain’s 160-year-old savings bank now lies in tatters. A former HMRC boss takes the helm for now, but who will dare to take up the mantle thereafter?
Continue reading

Our exclusive reporting on NS&I victims facing inheritance tax bills is available to subscribers only,
read the full story here

Go deeper with our full coverage of the NS&I scandal:

The boss who led Britain’s savings bank to chaos

...
and his replacement, the career civil servant who failed to fix HMRC’s customer service

‘My father-in-law died, then NS&I locked us out of his savings’

 

Opinion

David Frost Headshot

David Frost

Starmer is just the robotic face of a more dangerous British rot

An obsession with rules and a refusal to see that procedure is not just an algorithm – the PM is a reflection of how the state functions

Continue reading

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

Sherelle Jacobs

The awful truth is that ‘toxic’ men might just have a point

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Sharron Davies</span> Headshot

Sharron Davies

IOC change protects only the elite, what about the rest of us?

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Catherine Wieland was caught surfing and zip-lining while on holiday in Mexico

Iran must-reads

How Ukraine killed Putin’s plan to make billions from Iran war

The Kremlin has crowed over soaring oil revenues, writes Antonia Langford. However, Kyiv has struck its oil export terminals across the Leningrad region, sending plumes of smoke into the sky that were visible from Finland and inflicting the most severe disruption to Moscow’s oil supply in modern Russian history.
Continue reading

Go deeper with our full coverage of the Iran war:

Follow the latest updates on the conflict

Roland Oliphant: Trump needs troops to seize the Strait of Hormuz. These are his options

American troops forced to withdraw from Middle East bases

US president: UK aircraft carriers are toys

 

Your Essential Reads

The cult Nineties star on her faith, her struggles with fame and playing ‘catch’ with Elizabeth Taylor’s engagement ring

Patsy Kensit: ‘People have hurt me over the years’

Over Easter, Patsy Kensit will appear in BBC Two’s Pilgrimage, examining her Catholic faith. She tells Claire Allfree that nowadays “I tend to get anxious, and I can be a bit of a loner”. She also reflects on her 54 years in front of the camera and the intense media scrutiny that came with it, admitting she’s wondered if it was “the right choice”.

Continue reading

 

Business owners turn on Labour after fresh attack from Reeves

If Rachel Reeves had been hoping for a constructive meeting with supermarket bosses this week, she would have been disappointed. Following a slew of attacks on businesses, the Treasury was this week forced to postpone its supermarket roundtable when almost every grocery chief executive said they would not be attending. What appears to be a scheduling clash, according to insiders, is in fact a sign of the growing gulf between the private sector and the Government, as frustration grows at being “hauled over the rocks”.

For subscribers only

 

British-born TV personality Kari Wells was assaulted during a raid in her affluent Atlanta suburb

‘I left Yorkshire and found the American dream. Then I was held up at gunpoint’

By 2019, Kari Wells had everything she had always wanted – on paper, at least. She had emigrated from her native Yorkshire to the United States aged 22 to work in the ski industry in Aspen, Colorado, but managed to forge a career in TV. That same year, she was at a beauty salon when armed robbers burst in and hit her in the face with a butt of a gun. Days later she returned to her work on TV but, as she explains, “the aftermath was more traumatising than the event”, and this brutal event forced her to reevaluate her life choices.

Continue reading

 

Dave Davies has been hurt by Moby’s accusations but says he doesn’t bear him any ill will

Dave Davies: ‘The word transphobia didn’t even exist when we recorded Lola’

After trance star Moby branded The Kinks’ 1970 classic Lola as “transphobic”, “gross”, and “unevolved” earlier this week, Nicole Lampert speaks to the band’s lead guitarist Dave Davies. “Who’s Moby?” is his response to the criticism. Davies’s brother, Ray, has an angrier retort. As for Lola, the musician recalls when he first heard his brother’s composition: “It was fun and quite beautiful, about real people and real antics. There is nothing nasty about it.”

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

The easy switch to boost your Isa (and the common trap to avoid)

While you can’t control stock market dips, investors can at least opt for zero-fee providers, potentially saving thousands in the process. However, zero fee isn’t the same as “free”. Platforms need to make money somehow and unless you know exactly what the charges are, you could stumble into unexpected costs.

Continue reading

Here is another helpful article for you this morning:

  • Working out boosts collagen production and reduces inflammation, but without preventative measures, issues can develop. From runner’s face to swimmer’s sunburn, this is how exercise affects your skin.
 

Reviews of the week

Raye’s cinematic concept album is a towering achievement

Raye performs at Ronnie Scott’s

Raye performing at Ronnie Scott’s in London

Pop

Raye: This Music May Contain Hope

★★★★☆

Raye’s new album gives the impression of someone with the luxury of a free rein. If anyone has this gift, it’s the 28-year-old south Londoner. Her first album, My 21st Century Blues, netted her a record six Brit Awards in 2024. She can do what she wants. This Music May Contain Hope elevates her worldview to cinematic proportions. It’s a concept album of sorts: a dazzling jazz-pop odyssey that oscillates between heartache, messiness and optimism.
Read James Hall’s review

Pop

Paul McCartney: Days We Left Behind

★★★★☆

Paul McCartney’s first single in more than five years is a slice of unabashed nostalgia about his childhood in post-war Liverpool. Now 83, the ex-Beatle has returned with Days We Left Behind – a trip down memory lane guiding us through his early years, including his first meeting with John Lennon. Taken from McCartney’s forthcoming album The Boys of Dungeon Lane, which will be released on May 29, it’s more reminiscent of late-career Johnny Cash than prime Beatles. For Fab Four completists, it’s a must-listen.
Read James Hall’s review

Television

The Pitt

★★★★★

What was the last TV show you had to wait to watch? A drama that was coming that you just knew was going to knock your sofa-socks off? The Pitt is an American real-time hospital drama that has been winning awards for more than a year, but has only just arrived in this country. One reason for that is that HBO held it back for the launch of its new British streaming service. It’s well worth the wait.
Read Benji Wilson’s review

Theatre
Henry V
★★☆☆☆
Given that the world is on fire, the timing of the RSC’s revival of Henry V looks impeccable. We’re a far cry from the opening salvo of Nicholas Hytner’s regime at the National in 2003, starring Adrian Lester, which made the work richly responsive to the agonies around Iraq. Despite promising work from Alfred Enoch as the valiant king, both he and Tamara Harvey’s production lack essential urgency and vitality.
Read Dominic Cavendish’s review

 

From the fashion desk

Her Majesty’s favourites have done her proud

 

Your say

Airs and graces

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...
Well, it’s official: class remains one of the great British obsessions. At least, that’s what the response to The Telegraph’s new survey suggests. People have leapt at the chance to find out where they fit in, me very much included. How did I fare? Let’s just say I have work to do if I want to break into the elite.


 

Readers have been reflecting on their results and the vagaries of class more generally. One writes: “I started out as a working-class child. I attended grammar school but not university, and have had numerous jobs. Because my husband and I worked hard, we’ve gone from a council flat to a four-bedroom detached home with a third of an acre.

“Our joint income is just under comfortable, but I am good at money management, so we can afford two decent holidays a year. I still have a Sarf London accent.”


 

David Ward adds: “I grew up poor, but was something of an autodidact. With wise investment, I have acquired wealth. My speech and cultural interests lead people I meet to assume I am Oxbridge-educated. Now if I want to speak like the East End Cockney I used to be, I find it difficult to do so.”


 

For John Smith, meanwhile, “the class issue in Britain is still a mystery, even though I have lived here for more than 30 years (I’m originally from Down Under). Fancy being judged simply by the work your parents did, or whether you prefer opera to football.”


 

I also enjoyed this, from W L Nichol: “My nine-year-old wanted to do the test. She was delighted to be elite. I can only assume it’s because she is learning to play the violin, plays tennis and has a steady stream of passive income.”

Have you taken the survey? What did you make of your result? 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 FLYWEIGHT. 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

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.