jeudi 4 juin 2026

How anti-white racism captured Britain

The savers wrongly charged thousands for tax they don’t owe | Britain wasted Brexit’s potential. This is how we should fix it
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Thursday, 4 June 2026

Issue No. 466

Good morning.

The murder of Henry Nowak has prompted a riot in Southampton and a seismic political fallout in Westminster. Jack Straw, the former home secretary, expressed the clear sentiments of many when he told The Telegraph last night that police anti-racism guidelines had gone too far.

Below, Gordon Rayner, Associate Editor, explains how race ideology has captured Britain’s police forces and Allister Heath, The Sunday Telegraph Editor, argues that for too long we have lost sight of Martin Luther King’s vision of a society where people are judged not “by the colour of their skin but by the content of their character”.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. For a limited time only, we’re giving you one year for just £1.99 per month on an All Access Subscription. If you’re already a subscriber make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

The savers wrongly charged thousands for tax they don’t owe

Britain wasted Brexit’s potential. This is how we should fix it

Plus, ‘I gained nearly 4st in midlife. Here’s how I lost it in six months’

Enjoy one year for just £1.99 a month

Explore more of our journalism with an All Access Subscription.

 

Anti-white racism is real, and there’ll be more Henry Nowaks until it’s crushed

Allister Heath

Allister Heath

Sunday Telegraph Editor

 

Martin Luther King’s vision of a society where people were judged not “by the colour of their skin but by the content of their character” once felt achievable in Britain. Progress in the fight against racism was tough-going, but we were moving in the right direction.

King’s dream once felt within reach

Then our elites lost the plot. They abandoned King’s commonsensical anti-racism. They started, over a 30-year period, to turn a blind eye to, or even justify, anti-white racism. The horrifying death of Henry Nowak has to be seen in this context.

What happened? Labour and Tories alike adopted the nostrums of critical race theory (CRT), a far-Left, anti-white, post-modern ideology incompatible with Western civilisation.

Western societies are deemed racist by definition, hotbeds of power imbalances and exploitation, even if nobody is actually racist. Intent is irrelevant: non-white minorities are inevitably oppressed by the white majority. The result? Instead of arguing that race should be irrelevant, our companies, schools and police have become more race conscious.

CRT’s great entryism to the police came in 1999 with Sir William Macpherson’s report into the death of Stephen Lawrence. While well-intentioned and correct about prejudice within the police, Macpherson made fatal concessions to CRT that continue to plague policing today.

Police have become more fearful of accusations of racism

In Nowak’s case, the result was surely that police believed the non-white killer Vickrum Digwa, whom they treated as a victim after he lied about being racially abused. They did not believe Nowak when he said he had been stabbed as he lay, in handcuffs, succumbing to knife wounds.

Nowak is just the latest scandal. As a matter of urgency, CRT must be extirpated from British policing. We need a genuine struggle against racism, correctly defined, not a woke “anti-racism” that promotes racial animosity and division.

You can read my full column, available only to subscribers, here. Meanwhile, my colleague Gordon Rayner digs deeper into how race ideology captured Britain’s police below.

 

How race ideology captured Britain’s police

A Black Lives Matter protest in 2020, shortly after George Floyd’s murder

Gordon Rayner

Gordon Rayner

Associate Editor

 

Why did Britain’s police forces decide to stop treating us all as equals?

A race action plan produced last year by police leaders in England and Wales told officers they could not be “colour blind” and should not treat everyone “the same”.

Another document published by the Metropolitan Police tells officers they cannot be “neutral” because of their “whiteness”.

Structural review of racism within the Metropolitan Police

The diversity, equity and inclusion blob appears to have taken over the UK’s police forces, and its effect on the mindset of the officers who handcuffed Henry Nowak as he lay dying is the subject of furious debate.

A police watchdog is investigating why they prioritised a killer’s false allegation of racial abuse over the pleas for help of a man who had been stabbed five times.

What we do know is that the rush to prove anti-racist credentials by Britain’s police chiefs was triggered not by any crisis that happened here, but by the murder of George Floyd thousands of miles away in a very different society with very different policing methods. The foreword to the national police race action plan says so.

Yet Britain had already gone through its own period of reflection following the bungled investigation into the murder of Stephen Lawrence, which had resulted in widespread changes and improvements for the better, as my colleague Allister Heath discusses above.

As plans to scrap race action plans grow, none of the people who wrote them has yet explained why a failure of American policing led to British policing changing for the worse.
For subscribers only

See more of our coverage below:

Officers in Nowak murder row force ‘pressured’ by diversity course

BBC apologises for misquoting Farage on Nowak murder

Sketch by Tim Stanley: Even the thick ones in Parliament know the woke experiment has gone horribly wrong

 

Opinion

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard Headshot

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

The China Shock 2.0 could destroy Europe as we know it

The EU’s industrial base could be obliterated in less than a decade

Continue reading

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

Camilla Tominey

Nigel Farage and Rupert Lowe are putting ego before country

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Allison Pearson</span> Headshot

Allison Pearson

I’m sick of Britain’s rapid decline being sold to me as an ‘improvement’

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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Headlines

Your Essential reads

Daniel Price, 43, discovered his PAYE tax code had been automatically changed with no warning

The savers wrongly charged thousands for tax they don’t owe

When Daniel Price noticed a £500 shortfall in his paycheque, he knew something had gone wrong with his tax bill. HMRC had speculatively calculated Price’s bill based on an inheritance payment which was only briefly held in his savings account before being moved elsewhere – meaning he was charged for savings interest he never actually earned. After The Telegraph launched an investigation into the matter, more workers reached out to tell us how HMRC automatically changed their PAYE tax codes because of flawed projections for interest on their cash savings.

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‘I learnt to be a Royal Marines sniper’

Arthur Scott-Geddes

While the Chelsea Flower Show was getting under way recently, I was in Scotland wielding a pair of secateurs for a different purpose, writes Arthur Scott-Geddes. I was assembling a ghillie suit under the watchful eye of a Royal Marine sniper. Do I have what it takes? What lessons are they taking from Ukraine? Are long-range guns being replaced by drones? Read on to find out what I learned on manoeuvres with some of the UK’s most elite servicemen.

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Britain wasted Brexit’s potential. This is how we should fix it

It’s 10 years this month since Britain voted for Brexit. In an exclusive extract from his new book, Roger Bootle, one of the City’s leading economists, shows how a serious Brexit has not yet been attempted – and explains why the best of our independent future is still to come.

Continue reading

Plus, join Allister Heath and special guests at the Emmanuel Centre on June 29 for The Big Debate: How to make Brexit a success.
Book your place here

How to make Brexit a success debate

Join Allister Heath and special guests for an evening of unscripted debate, insider insight and a look at the future of the nation

 

‘An elderly couple left me their house. Now I’m telling their wartime love story’

As a 14-year-old schoolgirl in Guildford in 1987, Natalie Gordon thought nothing of the casual chats she had with an older couple, Pam and Ron, outside the supermarket on her way to school. Thirty one years later, the surprising legacy of this chance encounter became apparent.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

‘I gained nearly 4st in midlife. Here’s how I lost it in six months’

Rebecca Saunders before and after her weight loss, which she achieved with strength training and a steady calorie deficit

Like many women my age, I was intimidated by the weights room and convinced my best years were behind me. But learning to build strength changed everything, writes Rebecca Saunders. At 50, she is stronger than ever, having transformed her health, built muscle and maintained her results for three years. Here is how she did it.

Continue reading

Here is another article I hope you’ll find helpful this morning:

  • If his son is to be believed, Clint Eastwood has made his final film. Here, we rank the actor and director’s 10 greatest works.
 

Food for thought

Diana Henry weighs in on the great scone debate

In yesterday’s edition of From the Editor, we asked for your comments on the great scone debate. Thanks to all who got in touch with their differing methods. We thought there would be no better person to have the final say than Diana Henry, our award-winning cookery writer, who shares her favourite recipe for the delicacy.

Scone preparation has divided Britons for centuries

Diana Henry

Diana Henry

The Telegraph’s award-winning cookery writer

 

I can never believe what a lather people get into over scones and their adornments but they touch something deep.

I am in complete agreement with Rob James who has applied himself to the science of it. “Only one way makes sense to me,” he says. “Butter, jam then cream. If you don’t use a smear of butter, you risk the scone surface fracturing when the jam is added. Using the cream instead as lubricant to prevent this doesn’t work with warm scones.”

This order has always seemed obvious to me. Butter first so that there is something salty against the sweetness of the scone, then jam (again, for contrast), then cream, a small spoonful of richness that elevates the whole.

This is not the “Sussex method” (jam then cream; no butter) exalted by reader Andrew Hooper. “Vibrate the cream with the end of the knife or spoon,” he advises. “Clotted cream is thixotropic and will flow to perfectly cover the jam when agitated.”

I am so glad to know that clotted cream is “thixotropic”, meaning it becomes thinner when it’s stirred.

These discussions are not the nub of the issue though. The quality of the scone is what we should be looking at. I’ve persevered with decades of scones so dry they stuck to the roof of my mouth but I’ve discovered that my favourites, buttery and soft, are actually American.

Diana Henry spent four months making scones to different recipes – all to find the perfect formula

Staying in B&Bs in New England a few years back, I had scones every day at breakfast. I left with my handbag stuffed with scone recipes, which you’ll find here. We could learn from them.

If you’re tempted by something sweet, I’ll be sharing a bumper crop of summer berry dishes in my Recipes Newsletter on Saturday, June 6, including an exclusive – a grown-up take on strawberries, jelly and cream. Sign up here and you’ll also receive, in a further special edition on June 20, a clutch of chicken recipes.

Now, what came first, the chicken or the egg…?

 

Your say

House pests

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 grew up in a fairly idyllic corner of the country. When the holidays rolled round, my parents were always inundated with requests from friends who wanted to stay. In general these were gladly received – after all, it meant not having to travel hundreds of miles to see them – but just occasionally there’d be a heavy sigh. Brows would furrow. “Remember what they were like last time”?

What the actually-quite-annoying-in-close-quarters friends in question needed, of course, was Anthony Peregrine’s comprehensive guide: How not to be the house guest from hell.

Telegraph readers, too, have been recalling visitors who would have benefited from it.


 

One wrote: “My sister and her husband always act as though they’re staying in an Airbnb, in which they can behave as they choose: they ignore the owners, and come and go without any sort of warning. I once found them reorganising a cupboard in my kitchen.”


 

Mark Menhinick added: “Many years ago, my niece’s Aussie friends turned up (I live near Rome) with a camper van. I made the mistake of asking if they wanted any washing done, and was immediately presented with five large bin bags overflowing with dirty clothes. They were very pleasant, though.”


 

Not ideal – but this, from Deborah Cardwell, seems to me to reach another level: “We invited two people to stay in our house in the Vaucluse. Half an hour after they arrived, their uninvited friends appeared. He, a man in his seventies, started stripping off literally as he got out of the car. He walked straight past us in his lime green swimming trunks, jumped into our pool, surfaced, clicked his fingers at us and shouted: ‘A scotch and soda would be nice.’”


 

Mollie Regan offered a solution: “We moved to France 21 years ago and learnt very early on that, if anyone said they were coming over to our neck of the woods, our reply would be: ‘How lovely. Where are you staying?’”

I’d like to hear your stories. Send them to me 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

1927 | The first official Ryder Cup ends with the US beating Great Britain 9.5 to 2.5

1940 | Sir Winston Churchill delivers his famous “fight on the beaches” speech (which we published in full in the following day’s paper, seen below)

1964
| Sir Geoffrey Boycott makes his England Test debut against Australia at Trent Bridge (you can read his latest Telegraph column here)

Birthdays: Princess Lilibet of Sussex (5), Ben Stokes (35), Angelina Jolie (51)

Telegraph front page

Plus, this New York City property overlooking the treetops of Central Park and Manhattan’s skyline is on the market for $4.75m (£3.5m). Which celebrity, who died in 2016, did the apartment belong to?

1. Carrie Fisher
2. Prince
3. David Bowie
4. Gene Wilder

Click one of the options to reveal the answer...

 

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 HERBIVORE. 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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mercredi 3 juin 2026

Henry Nowak’s final hours

Trump’s outburst reflects Israel’s sinking popularity | Six surprising signs of ADHD
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Wednesday, 3 June 2026

Issue No. 465

Good morning.

Henry Nowak’s murder has shocked the nation. A dying man in handcuffs, accused of racism by the killer who had stabbed him five times. Until now, the details have been unclear, but the release of police body-cam footage has revealed the troubling truth of how officers brushed off the victim’s desperate pleas for help. Below, Tim Sigsworth pieces together Nowak’s final hours.

Sir Keir Starmer said he “felt sick” watching the video, and that the officers – three of whom are still on active duty – had “serious questions” to answer. Forces are under pressure to scrap positive discrimination policies amid accusations that Nowak was failed by “two-tier” policing.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try All Access today for just 25p per month, but hurry, this email-exclusive offer must end soon. If you’re already a subscriber make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Trump outburst reflects Israel’s sinking popularity

The middle-class preppers planning for disaster

Plus, six surprising signs of ADHD you might not spot

Ends soon: Four months for 25p per month

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

 

How the Henry Nowak murder unfolded

Tim Sigsworth

Tim Sigsworth

News Reporter

 

Henry Nowak checked his hair and adjusted the collar of his quarter-zip jumper.

It was 8.30pm and the student was looking in the mirror of a lift as he was leaving his accommodation at the University of Southampton for a night out with his football teammates.

Henry Nowak in the lift, leaving his student accommodation

Just three hours later, he lay dying on the ground in handcuffs, accused of racism by a man who had stabbed him five times after they met in the street. We have reconstructed the 18-year-old’s final hours.

8.30pm

Nowak’s night out began when he left his halls of residence. Dressed smartly in shirt and tie, he and his teammates visited an off-licence, a pub and a nightclub as they marked the end of their first term at university.

11.17pm
Shortly after 11pm, both Vickrum Digwa and Nowak were making their way home. They met by chance on Belmont Road, where Digwa had parked his car before launching the attack.

When Digwa’s brother, Gurpreet, called 999, the siblings claimed Nowak had racially abused Digwa and had carried out an unprovoked assault. This was a lie. Their parents, who lived nearby, arrived at the scene before the police and Digwa gave the murder weapon to his mother for disposal.

11.37pm
It was more than 15 minutes before police arrived. Once there, they handcuffed Nowak, who, in an eerie echo of George Floyd’s death, cried out: “I can’t breathe.”

The police placed Henry Nowak in handcuffs after he told them he had been stabbed

By the time the officers realised he was telling the truth, Nowak had stopped responding. He was pronounced dead at 12.37am. Digwa was finally arrested, but unlike his victim, he was never handcuffed.

Nowak’s treatment at the hands of those who were meant to help him reads like fiction. Astonishingly, it is fact.

This report is available only to subscribers.
Continue reading

See more of our coverage below:

Police face calls to drop race bias policies

The ‘cult of diversity and inclusion’ at heart of police force

Protesters in Southampton throw bricks and bottles at police

Three officers who arrested Nowak remain on front-line duty

 

Opinion

Allison Pearson Headshot

Allison Pearson

Henry Nowak’s death shows how brainwashed Britain’s police have become

A beloved, blameless teenager died in custody because there’s nothing officers in 2026 fear more than allegations of ‘racism’

Continue reading

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

Nigel Farage

Henry Nowak’s murder should be a wake-up call for Britain

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Patrick Kidd</span> Headshot

Patrick Kidd

Murrell’s in for a long stretch... it’d be perfect for a motorhome

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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Headlines

The Princess of Wales

The Princess of Wales wore a heart-print Rodarte dress

Your Essential Reads

Donald Trump exploded in a phone call with Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday

Trump’s outburst reflects Israel’s sinking popularity

On Monday, Donald Trump exploded in a phone call with Benjamin Netanyahu, telling the Israeli prime minister: “Everybody hates you now. Everybody hates Israel.” These words have resonated with Paul Nuki, our Global Health Security Editor, who laid irrigation pipes on an Israeli kibbutz as a teenager. I have relatives in the country’s ultra-orthodox Haredi community and have visited many times as a reporter to cover the conflict there, he writes. Trump’s words contain more than a hint of truth. Words that I have sometimes felt like shouting, and yet they are also chilling. Words that the Jewish state ignores at its peril.
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When AI is more expensive than people, why replace the people?

For two years, Silicon Valley has promised that AI would replace millions of workers and transform the economy – but what if the economics never stacked up in the first place? As companies start confronting the true cost of their AI obsession, the industry’s assumptions are coming under scrutiny. Andrew Orlowski reports.

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Sarita Robinson has spent 20 years studying how people react in emergencies and is known online as ‘Dr Survival’

The middle-class preppers planning for disaster

“I buy tinned tomatoes in big slabs, around 24 tins at a time, and a dozen 500ml bottles of balsamic vinegar,” explains one middle-class “micro-prepper”. Also on her stockpile list: 48 tins of stuffed vine leaves, 60 to 80 toilet rolls, 24 two-litre bottles of sparkling water and 24 cartons of UHT milk. Why? To prepare for supply chain shortages or the knock-on effects of war. Debbi Marco reports.

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Lord’s Cricket Ground

The 150th Lord’s Test is here – these are its greatest moments

Tomorrow, England will take on New Zealand in the first Lord’s Test of the summer, writes Michael Vaughan. In that match, Lord’s will become the first cricket ground to host 150 Tests. Scyld Berry has written a brilliant piece in which he picks the ground’s finest moments.

This summer also marks 20 years since Test cricket went behind a paywall in England, and with Test Match Special in danger of losing its exclusive coverage of home summer internationals, the game’s broadcasting rights remain a divisive issue, as Will Macpherson explores here.

I will share my thoughts at the start and end of every England Test in my newsletter Cricket with Michael Vaughan, as well as the best articles to dig into.

Sign up here to receive the first edition tomorrow

 

Seize the day

Six surprising signs of ADHD you might not spot

ADHD illustration

Experts say there are subtle signs of ADHD that are often overlooked

Despite growing awareness of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), charities estimate that only one in nine people with the condition in Britain has received a formal diagnosis. Dr James Kustow, a consultant psychiatrist and author of How to Thrive with Adult ADHD, believes there needs to be more awareness of “amber lights”, subtle signs of ADHD that are often unexpected and overlooked. Here, he reveals six ways ADHD can appear in everyday life – from causing relationship problems to sleeping difficulties – and why it happens.

Continue reading

Here is another article I hope you’ll find helpful this morning:

 

Lisa Armstrong’s makeovers

Today marks the last instalment of Lisa’s makeovers for the time being. If you have a fashion dilemma, send us your problems here and we’ll do our best to answer them in a future edition of this newsletter.

 

Your say

The great scone debate

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...
Summer in England. A time for meandering walks through the teeming countryside, serenaded by the cuckoo call. A time for whiling away your Saturday afternoon in a bright pub garden, and, of course, a time for arguing about which should go on a scone first: jam or cream.

Actually, it wasn’t the changing of the seasons that unleashed this debate among Telegraph readers. Rather, it was the revelation, courtesy of the Prince of Wales, that Elizabeth II favoured the latter. This is known as the Devon method and, having grown up in Cornwall, I must respectfully state that it is wrong.


 

Many of the responses, however, have come from avowed Devonians. Andrew Forbes argued: “Definitely cream first – a properly craggy crown of clotted glory, then a generous blob of jam.”


 

Christine Boon added: “I agree that it should be cream first. I think of the cream as a substitute for butter; you can then make an indentation in the centre and add the jam. To me this is just logical, but then I don’t come from Cornwall or Devon.”


 

It fell to Christine Freeman to make the Cornish case: “If the scones are warm, it makes sense to put jam on first.” What self-respecting country would serve scones cold?


 

Helen Townshend described a different – some might say maverick – approach: “Butter, jam, then cream. You can’t spread jam on cream. Well, some people can, but I can’t.”


 

Another reader, meanwhile, proposed a canny compromise: “Cut the scone in half. Put cream on one bit and jam on the other. Reassemble as a sandwich, and guests can turn it over depending whether they’re Cornish or Devonian. The wisdom of Solomon (probably).”

Well then: which side are you on? 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

1940 | Some of the last British and French soldiers are evacuated from Dunkirk (and our front page the following morning)

1969 | Children’s book The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle is published

2019 | Donald Trump begins three-day state visit to Britain

2020 | Three police officers charged in connection with death of George Floyd in Minneapolis

Birthdays: Rafael Nadal (40), Jill Biden (75), Dame Penelope Wilton (80)

Telegraph front page

Plus, in today’s news, the Bank of England has published a shortlist of 18 native animals that could replace Winston Churchill on the £5 note.

Below is a sample of four mock-ups. Click on the animal you’d prefer, and we will reveal the winner in a future edition of this newsletter.

Animal bank note mock-ups

1. Hare
2. Hedgehog
3. Pine Marten
4. Fox

 

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 EARMARKED. 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.

Ends soon: Four months for 25p per month

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