mercredi 24 juin 2026

Burnham takes on Starmer over defence

Reality bites after England's limp performance | Heatwave Britain shuts down
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Wednesday, 24 June 2026

Issue No. 486

Good morning.

Andy Burnham has told allies he would spend more on defence than Sir Keir Starmer and a row has broken out over who should drive the spending plan. Starmer wants the wheel as part of the legacy he intends to leave, but Burnham says he should have it as the PM-in-waiting. One thing is clear, as Tony Diver, our Political Editor, points out: Starmer’s power is diminishing by the day.

Elsewhere, it’s getting hotter again today, and the extreme weather has brought Britain to a standstill, prompting a wave of pre-emptive school closures and travel warnings. Plus, Oliver Brown, our Chief Sports Writer, pores over a limp England display in the World Cup, which has given Thomas Tuchel, and the nation, a reality check.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. We’re giving you a year of The Telegraph for £1.99 per month. 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

Lies, damned lies, and Brexit economic models

‘Am I pre-frail? My flat bum and skinny legs are a big red flag’

Plus, heatwave dangers and what happens to your body – minute by minute

Ends soon: A year for £1.99 per month

Stay ahead of every crucial update as Burnham closes in on No 10

 

Burnham: I’ll boost spending on defence

Andy Burnham celebrates after his swearing-in at the Houses of Parliament

Tony Diver

Tony Diver

Political Editor

 

In the corridors of Westminster and Whitehall, you can feel the power draining away from Sir Keir Starmer as he prepares to step down.

The Prime Minister insists he will publish his defence investment plan (DIP) in the next two weeks, before next month’s Nato summit and his departure.

However, that decision is now being challenged by Andy Burnham, his presumptive successor, who has told allies he will fund defence more than Starmer when he takes office.

The Telegraph understands Burnham is planning to totally review the DIP and will look for more savings across Whitehall to keep the threat from Russia at bay.

That is good news for military chiefs, but bad news for Starmer, who was hoping to use the DIP as part of his prime ministerial legacy.

Meanwhile, Burnham is already locked in talks with civil service bosses about his agenda, as part of the cross-Whitehall “access” process.

It will not be long before civil servants down tools, waiting for their departments to come under new management and the leadership of a new prime minister with his own priorities.

Defence and security, not usually Burnham’s strong suits, will surely be at the top of the list.

This report is available only to subscribers.
Continue reading

 

World Cup diary

Reality bites after England’s limp performance

World Cup scores

England’s best chance came when Nico O’Reilly’s header rebounded off the bar to Harry Kane, who fired over from close range

Oliver Brown

Oliver Brown

Chief Sports Writer at the Gillette Stadium, Boston

 

The drizzly Massachusetts sky mirrored the gloom enveloping England after an anaemic goalless draw against Ghana. It felt as if the air had been sucked out of their campaign, as Thomas Tuchel’s team underlined their split personality by following a free-wheeling win over Croatia with this lifeless performance.

Nothing quite worked, with Harry Kane a shadow of his lethal self up front, Jude Bellingham cutting an exasperated figure all game, and neither Anthony Gordon nor Noni Madueke offering any threat on the wings. Bellingham took the man-of-the-match award but at least had the perspective to admit that he hardly deserved it.

His frustrations, which threatened to boil over in a half-time skirmish with Ghana manager Carlos Queiroz, conveyed the mood.

Carlos Queiroz, the Ghana head coach, makes his feelings known to Jude Bellingham at the break

However much Tuchel loaded the gun, the bullets stubbornly refused to fire. There was no instant second-half turnaround this time, as Morgan Rogers and Marcus Rashford failed to unlock the late breakthrough. Was this an aberration, a solitary sour note in Tuchel’s pursuit of putting a second star on the shirt? You had to hope so, given the dissatisfaction of fans at the final whistle.

Thomas Tuchel may reflect on some of his squad selections

While the Ghanaians stayed long after the match had ended in a singalong to John Denver’s Take Me Home, Country Roads, many England supporters streamed for the exits, furious at witnessing such a slight return on tickets that cost north of £2,000. Another limp result in this vein and the prevailing goodwill towards the team will soon curdle.
Read the full report here

Jamie Carragher: Thomas Tuchel has made a huge mistake leaving Cole Palmer at home

 

Opinion

Sherelle Jacobs Headshot

Sherelle Jacobs

This is Al Carns’s chance to spoil Burnham’s coronation

The former Armed Forces minister is one of a very small handful in the Labour Party who have the potential to make a real difference

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">James Kirkup</span> Headshot

James Kirkup

The real reason Andy Burnham is going to shift Britain to the Left

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Ysenda Maxtone Graham</span> Headshot

Ysenda Maxtone Graham

Heatwave hysterics wouldn’t have lasted a day in 1976

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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Headlines

Lara Bird said she was swearing allegiance to the monarch ‘only so that I can serve the people of Arbroath and Broughty Ferry’

Essential reads

Do not travel warnings issued and schools close as heatwave sends Britain into meltdown

 

Lies, damned lies, and Brexit economic models

Andy Burnham has avoided talking much about Europe so far, but probably not for much longer, writes Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, our World Economy Editor. It’s 10 years since the referendum and the number who believe Brexit was wrong has risen to 57 per cent. The established view is that it has ruined Britain economically. However, the data tell a different story: Britain has actually outgrown Germany in seven of the past eight years.
Continue reading

Gordon Rayner, our Associate Editor, has spoken to Sir David Davis, the former Brexit secretary, who warned that the Labour Party would cease to exist if its next leader tried to rejoin the EU. Elsewhere, Nigel Farage joined Camilla and Tim on yesterday’s episode of The Daily T to discuss Brexit’s legacy and why he believes the nation has yet to see its benefits.

 

Josh Kerr: ‘Fasting encourages the body to utilise fats during easy runs and also just helps to keep me lean’

‘My diet to break a world record – and why I include fasting’

Improving my diet has been a massive factor in winning my three world titles since 2023, writes Josh Kerr. Nutrition will also be crucial to my mile world record attempt in London next month. So let me introduce you to my amazing chef Jameel Austin and take you into the kitchen to reveal exactly what I eat, and why, during a training week.

Continue reading

 

US navy Seabees construct boat ramps on the western coast of Latvia in preparation for a possible counter-offensive against Russia

Nato prepares for the Battle of the Baltics

“Fire in the hole,” a US marine bellowed as I ducked for cover behind a concrete bunker, writes James Rothwell. On this occasion, Heathcliff O’Malley, The Telegraph’s photographer, and I weren’t reporting from a warzone. Instead, we were covering a sprawling US-led military exercise in Latvia that could prove crucial in defending Nato’s eastern flank. So, how well-prepared are we for this “battle for the Baltic”, and what does a cute-sounding military logistics unit called the Seabees have to do with it?

This dispatch is available only to subscribers.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

Heatwave dangers and what happens to your body – minute by minute

A red weather warning has been issued to cover today and tomorrow, as the heat could come close to Britain’s all-time record of 40.3C, set in July 2022. As the weather warms, it’s vital to know how to protect yourself from heat-stroke, a medical emergency that can quickly become fatal. Read what happens to your body when it’s exposed to heat and find out how to stay safe this week.

Continue reading

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

  • Kate Mulvey, our writer, had always prided herself on her good figure, so she was shocked to find out that her slimness was an early sign of pre-frailty. Here’s how she fixed it.
 

Trend translator

It’s hard to keep track of what’s in and what’s out when it comes to Gen Z. In today’s column, LA Robinson, our youthful Lifestyle Writer, investigates the rise of OnlyFans in Britain.

LA Robinson

LA Robinson

Lifestyle Writer

 

Second only to the US, Britain has the world’s highest number of creators on OnlyFans, the platform that allows people to sell their own sexually explicit content (even Lily Allen has admitted she’s used the platform to sell photos of her feet).

The majority of creators are women in their twenties – the daughters of Britain. Most never make more than £120 per month, but the top earners can break the million mark, with the most (in)famous being Bonnie Blue, a 26-year-old mother-to-be who claims to have slept with 1,000 men in one day and is planning an unorthodox celebration of her pregnancy, where she will invite her paying fans to, er, participate.

She’s no role model, but with more than one million young people not in education, employment or training in this country, it’s easy to see why some might be seduced by the easy route to the type of sports car, designer duds and beach holiday-lifestyle OnlyFans creators like Blue boast about.

With the youths’ prefrontal cortexes yet to reach their final form, the future prospect of their pornographic content following them around forever might not sink in. As one regretful former creator told The Telegraph: “There’s nothing I can do to remove [the videos from the internet] – if I think about that too much, it’s absolutely horrific… I wanted to be a teacher but now I can’t.”

Charlotte Divine discussed how social media lured her into the porn industry

Let us hope that the Government’s new Youth Guarantee scheme, which promises to create 300,000 work experience and training placements, is effective. Before someone’s daughter tries to become the next Bonnie Blue.

What do you think about OnlyFans? Let me know here.

 

Your say

Summers past

While Orlando Bird, our loyal reader correspondent, is away, Joe Burgis is on hand to share an off-piste topic that has brought out the best of your opinions and stories.

Joe writes...
Sweltering on a delayed train yesterday morning, I longed for a string vest and a packet of crisps. In 1976, as Nick Harding reports, doctors recommended these measures for keeping cool and replacing salt lost when sweating.

Alas, dressed in a shirt and jeans, I had to settle for a sticky and snackless wait outside Paddington, listening to a barrage of recorded messages about dehydration.


 

Readers remembered 1976 with a fondness that I suspect won’t be replicated 50 years from now.

Susie Parr wrote: “I was at senior school. As it was such a hot summer, we were allowed to bring drinks into school. This had never happened before. We found small Tupperware beakers with push-off lids, poured in cordial and water, and froze them overnight. They were great. In fact, I am off to find that Tupperware beaker now.”


 

Norman Goldner also recalled perks of the heatwave: “In 1976, we were permitted to remove our ties in the office.” What larks!


 

How did one stay cool in the 1970s? Alyn Vincent explained: “Before Evian spray was a thing, I used a plastic bottle (made for spraying delicate flowers) to spray my face and arms. I soaked a floppy hat in water and wore it while it dripped down my face and back. A wet scarf around my neck cooled the jugular.”

Well, that’s tomorrow’s commute sorted.


 

As you’d expect, the students, like Guy Farrish, made the most of a hot situation: “I remember the university authorities issuing thousands of water barrels with taps in case rationing happened.

“However, the appointment of Denis Howell as minister for drought soon brought rain, and the barrels were used instead to start a small cottage brewing industry. Waste not, want not.”

That’s all from me folks. I’ll be back tomorrow to bring you the best Telegraph talking points. In the meantime, you can contact me here.

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

1509 | Henry VIII is crowned King in Westminster Abbey

2010 | John Isner beats Nicolas Mahut in longest match in tennis history: 11hr 5min, played over three days

2016 | David Cameron resigns as prime minister after the Brexit vote (see our front page below from the following day)

2023
| The Wagner Group, led by Yevgeny Prigozhin, marches towards Moscow to attempt a coup

Birthdays: Lionel Messi (39), Stuart Broad (40), Mick Fleetwood (79)

Telegraph front page

Plus, in the news today, Newhaven’s West Beach in Sussex was the subject of a mass trespass. Which country owns the stretch of coastline?

The gate to Newhaven West Beach, missing its padlock

1. Germany
2. Italy
3. France
4. Spain

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 AWKWARDLY. 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 at fromtheeditor@telegraph.co.uk.

Ends soon: A year for £1.99 per month

Stay ahead of every crucial update as Burnham closes in on No 10

 

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mardi 23 juin 2026

Burnham set for coronation

The return of the great British bookshop | Products to help you get through the heatwave
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Tuesday, 23 June 2026

Issue No. 485

Good morning.

It now looks increasingly likely that Andy Burnham will be Britain’s next prime minister. So why wait until September? Gordon Rayner, our Associate Editor, discusses the summer of uncertainty that awaits a nation in limbo. The PM-in-waiting’s train journey south was captured from a helicopter and broadcast on live television, but we were in the carriage with Burnham. Below, Anita Singh describes the scene. Finally, it is certain that no matter who the next chancellor is, Labour’s war on wealth is only just beginning.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. We have an exclusive offer running for email readers. Subscribe today and try a year of The Telegraph 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 a middle-class heroin addict who lost it all’

The return of the great British bookshop

Plus, products to help you get through the heatwave

One year for just £1.99 per month

Explore the full range of our free-thinking journalism with our email-exclusive offer

 

Burnham set for coronation

Blower Cartoon
Tony Diver

Tony Diver

Political Editor

 

Could it really have been that easy? Just four days after winning a by-election and becoming an MP, Andy Burnham is all but certain to become the next prime minister.

The former mayor of Greater Manchester is likely to be crowned Labour leader without a leadership contest, after Wes Streeting dropped out of the race and declared his support for Burnham instead.

There is a group of Labour MPs who would like a contest, and Darren Jones has been mooted as a possible challenger, but the election looks over before it has begun.

Andy Burnham takes a selfie with Labour MPs on his return to Westminster

For the next three and a half weeks, Burnham will be scrambling to put together his top team and a policy platform that can unite the Labour Party after months of torrid infighting.

One source who has spoken to the PM-in-waiting says he will design a broad prospectus that can appeal to all Labour MPs, while largely sticking to the party’s 2024 manifesto.

A second says he will appoint a “government of all the talents” featuring the familiar faces of Streeting, Shabana Mahmood and Heidi Alexander.

Sir Keir Starmer, meanwhile, is licking his wounds and preparing for life on the back benches. He declared yesterday that he had taken every decision in the best interests of “the country I love”. The problem, in the end, was that the country didn’t love him back.
Read the full story here

EU delays Brexit reset talks

The runners and riders for Burnham’s Cabinet

 

Politics must reads

Andy Burnham is sworn in as an MP

Is Burnham Labour’s Messiah ... or just a very naughty boy?

Andy Burnham travelled to Westminster to be sworn in as MP for Makerfield and greeted as Labour’s Messiah, choosing to make the journey by rail, writes Anita Singh. He boarded the train as Manchester’s man of the people, in a T-shirt and trainers – albeit in first class. After a mid-journey outfit change, he disembarked in a suit, looking like a prime minister-in-waiting.

This report is available only to subscribers

 

The last thing the country needs is stalemate until September

Despite his stately procession to Parliament, Andy Burnham cannot even put his name forward to be the next Labour leader until nominations for the post open on July 9, and if anyone stands against him, it could be September before Sir Keir Starmer’s successor is in place, writes Gordon Rayner, our Associate Editor. With the pound falling and borrowing rates rising on the news of Starmer’s resignation, Britain can ill afford an entire summer of uncertainty.
Continue reading

Plus, read more analysis from Gordon here:

The decisions that made Starmer’s downfall inevitable

Why Streeting would be a wise choice as chancellor

 

Whoever Burnham chooses, Britain’s next chancellor is coming for your home

With Andy Burnham already measuring up the curtains in Downing Street, attention is now turning to who he may pick to be his neighbour in No 11, writes Szu Ping Chan, our Economics Editor. As speculation grows over whether the next chancellor will be Wes Streeting, Ed Miliband, Yvette Cooper or wildcard choices such as John Healey and Shabana Mahmood, examining their policies makes one thing clear. No matter who is chosen, Labour’s war on wealth is only just beginning.

Continue reading

 

Opinion

Sketch by Tim Stanley Headshot

Sketch by Tim Stanley

Burnham’s ‘naughty boy’ riposte tells us why he is supplanting the lumpen Starmer

This is our fifth praetorian coup in 10 years. Even the Roman senate would consider that too many

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Tom Harris</span> Headshot

Tom Harris

Andy Burnham is already in danger of becoming another Gordon Brown

Continue reading

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

David Blair

Spineless Starmer has left Britain exposed

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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Headlines

World Cup diary

The greatest to ever do it

Lionel Messi wheels away in celebration after scoring the 18th World Cup goal of his career

Sam Dean

Sam Dean

 

Lionel Messi turns 39 tomorrow and, given his age, he does not do much running these days. Such is the little man’s genius, though, he can still define matches by playing in brief bursts. He did so again against Austria yesterday, when he scored twice and became the World Cup’s all-time record goalscorer. It was yet more evidence that Messi is the greatest player the footballing world has ever seen.

Meanwhile, France’s match against Iraq in Philadelphia last night took four hours to finish after a biblical deluge.

French fans weren’t going to let a few drops of rain spoil their night

When the game finally restarted after a two-hour half-time delay, Kylian Mbappe quickly got into his stride, and his two goals, one either side of the delay, have put him one behind Messi on the all-time list.

World Cup scores

Elsewhere, Thomas Tuchel has praised Jude Bellingham’s commitment to England ahead of the national side’s second match of the World Cup against Ghana tonight. The England manager had previously claimed Bellingham’s relationships with team-mates “needed improvement”.

 

Essential reads

Sarah Hiscox

Sarah Hiscox, 58, has been sober for 25 years after battling a five-year heroin addiction

‘I was a middle-class heroin addict who lost it all’

What kind of young wife and mother of two takes class-A drugs? Not always the kind you’d expect. I first came across Sarah Hiscox in late eighties west London, writes Lisa Markwell, Head of Long Reads. We lost touch years ago, but I was intrigued by her descent into, and recovery from, heroin addiction. I wanted to know how she could fight back from destroying her own home life and losing her children.

For subscribers only

 

Donna Allenby gave up her jet-setting job to pursue her passion for books

The return of the great British bookshop

As the online world increasingly encroaches on the real one, a quiet revival is taking place in traditional brick-and-mortar bookshops. Some sellers are embracing niche subgenres, while others are counting on people yearning for their old-fashioned charm. “People are absolutely craving an analogue experience,” says bookseller Megan Nicholaides.

Continue reading

 
A portrait of Napoleon III

Napoleon III’s life was flamboyant, awash with dramatic reversals and wild erotic adventures

The ‘other’ Napoleon who adored sex and made France great again

Napoleon III has long been overshadowed by his uncle Bonaparte, writes Simon Sebag Montefiore, but his life was a thrill. He modernised Paris and its railways, understood working-class voters, tried to take over Mexico and slept with countless women. His actions led the novelist Georges Sand to warn that “entrusting the destinies of all to a single person is the most senseless act a civilised people can commit”.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

Expert-tested products to help you get through the heatwave

With temperatures predicted to reach 40C this week, you might be looking for ways to cool down, fast. From £25 fans to cooling bedding, the Recommended team has rounded up heatwave-busting products that will bring you some light relief, plus a few essentials to elevate your summer parties.
Continue reading

 

What your barbecue says about you

Ed Cumming

Ed Cumming

Senior Features writer

 

As the tarmac melts and wild-swimmers make for the nearest gully, there is only one acceptable form of cooking in Britain: barbecue. If you have not already blown the cobwebs from your Weber this year, now is your moment.

It is no longer the simple game of old, when it was enough to put a few coals in a drum and carbonise some Walls bangers. Like coffee and beer, barbecue in Britain has diversified.

From Big Green Eggs to gas-burning monstrosities and American-style smokers, there is remarkable variety of kit, and an equal number of tribes. Which is yours?

From which contraption can you expect to be served a 72-hour beef brisket, a slab of charred halloumi or an impeccable array of home-made salads?
Continue reading

Plus, sign up for our Recipes newsletter to receive a special edition tomorrow, featuring dishes, tips and inspiration for a sizzling summer barbecue.
Sign up here

 

Your say

The joys of village life

While Orlando Bird, our loyal reader correspondent, is away, Kate Moore is on hand to share an off-piste topic that has brought out the best of your opinions and stories.

Kate writes...
Growing up in the wilds of East Sussex, I was a devotee of the annual village fete. I never did quite as well in the fancy dress competition as my brother, but I leapt at the opportunity to consume excessive quantities of sugar and bash other children over the head with rubber swords.


 

Jane Shilling’s paean to the fete brought the revellers out in force, though the fun was tinged by a hint of melancholy. “I just love ’em,” said Kathleen Learmonth. “However they are very threatened by the cost of ludicrous insurance premiums and the health and safety brigade.”


 

It was the same story elsewhere. “Our village fete took place last weekend,” reported Jeremy Fry. “Alas the West Berkshire traffic mafia descended on the village car parks to ensure their share of the proceeds and profits.”


 

Fortunately, village stalwarts are undeterred. My mother starts baking four days beforehand and mans the enormous tea urn through the afternoon. It was good to learn that our readers are equally committed. “We have mounted a campaign of local fete attendance each summer in recent years and go increasingly further afield,” said Matthew Attwood. “It is nostalgia, but it's also something else. I suspect and hope that the growing attendance at these things is subtle evidence of a deep stirring in the shires.”


 

The unchanging nature of the entertainments on offer is part of the fete’s appeal. We received stories of vegetable champions and unruly vicars that could have come from any time in the past 100 years. A very good thing too. “I was at a barn dance once, held after a fete,” recalled Stephen Brooker. “The local vicar was there too and somewhat inebriated. Inebriated to the point that he declared to a lady he had been dancing with: ‘....You know, God is a complete pain in the arse....’ Such are the joys of village life.”

Send us your own stories of village festivities here and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of this newsletter. Here’s hoping for sunshine on the day.

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

1775 | The first rowing regatta is held on the Thames

1996 | Desmond Tutu retires as Archbishop of Cape Town

2016 | The Brexit referendum is held (our special edition front page from the following day is below)

Birthdays: Colin Montgomerie (63), Zinedine Zidane (54), Duffy (42)

Telegraph front page

What was discovered on a golf course in Darlington, County Durham?

1. Tarantulas
2. Medieval remains
3. Boa constrictors
4. Unexploded bombs

 

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 BADMINTON. 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.

One year for just £1.99 per month

Explore the full range of our free-thinking journalism with our email-exclusive offer.

 

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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.