lundi 6 juillet 2026

England’s greatest victory since 1966

Why Prince William won’t meet Harry | Russian hackers steal government logins
 ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏

Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Monday, 6 July 2026

Issue No. 498

Good morning.

England produced one of their greatest-ever World Cup performances last night. With a thrilling display of grit and determination, they held on to beat Mexico 3-2 in the high-altitude Azteca Stadium after having a player sent off in the 54th minute. Now a quarter-final in Miami awaits. Oliver Brown, our Chief Sports Writer, reports on the national team’s best game since 1966.

Elsewhere, the Duke of Sussex will return to Britain this week, alone, after pulling his family out of the trip at the last minute over security fears. At times he will be only around 25 miles from his brother, Prince William. Yet there remains no prospect of the two princes meeting each other, as Hannah Furness, our Royal Editor, explains.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. We’re giving email readers four months of The Telegraph for just 25p per month. If you’re already a subscriber make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Russian hackers steal government logins

The £1m gamble to beat the pensions death tax

Plus, true depth of Churchill and Elizabeth II’s friendship

All Access: Just 25p per month

Enjoy free-thinking journalism, daily puzzles and more with your email-exclusive offer.

 

World cup diary

England produce greatest World Cup victory since 1966

Oliver Brown

Oliver Brown

Chief Sports Writer at the Azteca Stadium, Mexico City

 

It was an occasion to stir the blood, burn the lungs, but ultimately lift the soul. With their most extraordinary World Cup display since 1966, England prevailed in a game for the ages, vanquishing co-hosts Mexico both through the brilliance of Jude Bellingham and a desperate late defensive effort with 10 men that entered the realm of the heroic.

So much for the drumbeat of doom about the altitude, the ferocious hostility, and the firecracker-brandishing fans who had tried to keep them up all night. Thomas Tuchel’s team absorbed it all and converted it into rocket fuel, propelling themselves to produce a victory that will be remembered for a lifetime.

So many times here in the cauldron of the Azteca Stadium, you feared the worst. Even after Bellingham’s two brilliantly taken first-half goals promised to put the outcome beyond doubt, there was a catalogue of chaos, with Julian Quinones’ strike sparking almost a Krakatoan eruption in the stands and Jarell Quansah’s red card for a dangerously high tackle sparking concerns about a collapse.

England raced into the lead with two goals from Bellingham

Yet England summoned their resolve as never before, refusing to panic when Raul Jimenez’s penalty roused the hosts to attack in wave after wave. As 6ft 8in Dan Burn was hurled into the fray to clear everything in his orbit, this team decided there would be no way through.

They exemplified every quality that England sides have so conspicuously lacked on the greatest stage in football, channelling every last drop of resilience and self-belief to deliver for each other and for the country.

Against all expectations, they are through to a quarter-final against Norway in Miami on Saturday. Truly, if this result does not galvanise national pride, nothing will.

This report is available only to subscribers.
Continue reading

Follow the latest reaction to the result here

Player ratings: Pickford has the game of his life

Sign up to Total Football for daily updates during the World Cup

Elsewhere, Erling Haaland fired Norway into the next round of the tournament with two goals last night, putting him level with Lionel Messi and Kylian Mbappe in the race for the Golden Boot.

Norway have never reached the World Cup quarter-finals before

Brazil, on the other hand, never looked stable or settled, and only got on the board with a penalty from Neymar in the 100th minute.
Read the full report here

 

Why Prince William won’t meet Harry

The Duke of Sussex is returning to Britain for a series of engagements this week

Hannah Furness

Hannah Furness

Royal Editor

 

It wasn’t so long ago that the prospect of Prince Harry coming to town would leave the same question on everyone’s lips: will he meet Prince William?

This time, everyone seems to have forgotten to ask. The answer, it seems, is too obvious: no, the brothers will not meet.

A few years ago, such a trip would have inspired incredulity and irritation from Palace insiders and aides. This time, one said, it is “eye-roll territory”.

They hope fervently that the Sussexes will remember their agreement with Queen Elizabeth II for no “half-in, half-out” royalty: no official-looking “engagements” while making money out of their proximity to the Royal family on the side.

As for this week? The Sussexes’ plans remain up in the air. The King, the Queen, and the Prince and Princess of Wales will be out and about with their official duties.

We will cover it all, and bring you the news and views from behind-the-scenes too.
Read Hannah’s full column

Sign up to Your Royal Appointment to receive Hannah’s expert analysis every week

 

Opinion

Simon Heffer Headshot

Simon Heffer

Burnham will soon be just as loathed as Starmer

He could be honest with the public about the scale of the challenges facing Britain. He won’t be

Continue reading

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

David Har

Anti-Zionism is repackaged anti-Semitism

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Zoe Strimpel</span> Headshot

Zoe Strimpel

Is it dangerous that I treat my Claude AI slave as human?

Continue reading

 

To make sure you don’t miss our newsletters when they land in your inbox, click here.

Headlines

summer of sport

F1 ends with a whimper... and Wimbledon salutes new King Arthur

The safety car leads Charles Leclerc, George Russell and Sir Lewis Hamilton to the finish line

Tom Cary

Tom Cary

at Silverstone

 

A dramatic British Grand Prix ended in farce as Formula One shot itself in both feet again. The decision to end the race behind a safety car, despite stewards having put out a message suggesting it would come in with one lap remaining, enraged fans, who responded with boos as Charles Leclerc led home George Russell and Sir Lewis Hamilton unchallenged.

The FIA, the global governing body for motorsport, said the message had been displayed “erroneously”. The finish led to debate about whether the rules were an ass, and whether they should have been ignored. Either way, the optics for F1 were terrible.
Continue reading

Tim Wigmore

Tim Wigmore

at Wimbledon

 

Amid a desolate Wimbledon for Britons, there has been one unexpected source of hope: Arthur Fery, the world no 114, who has launched an unexpected run into the second week.

Arthur Fery

Arthur Fery produced an incredible performance to stay in Wimbledon

In classic British style, his matches have not been short of drama. In his third-round clash against Zizou Bergs, Fery overcame three separate nosebleeds before sealing victory in a final-set tie-break.

Fery chose to play his third-round match on Court 18, which has become a home from home, but he will have to embrace a show court today for his fourth-round clash with Grigor Dimitrov.
Continue reading

 

Essential Reads

Russian hackers steal government logins

Russian hackers have infiltrated the email accounts of British government officials and overseas Foreign Office staff in a major national security breach. In the sophisticated attack, login credentials belonging to government staff including emails and coinciding passwords were stolen, allowing hackers, and anyone willing to pay them, the potential ability to infiltrate sensitive Whitehall systems.

Continue reading

 

Stickers at the AfD conference read ‘Kisses for Remigration’ and ‘You will be deported’

The AfD wants to make sending migrants home sexy

Once regarded as politically toxic, “remigration” has become the defining policy of the far-Right Alternative for Germany (AfD). At the party’s conference over the weekend, provocative campaign merchandise celebrated plans for mass deportations as supporters insisted the policy is about law and integration, not ethnicity. With the AfD now leading national polls, James Rothwell, our Berlin Correspondent, examines how an idea that once sparked outrage has entered the political mainstream.

For subscribers only

 

The £1m gamble to beat the pensions death tax

Spending £1m on an annuity that dies with you would once have been the definition of madness, but vastly improved rates and a chance to shelter your pension savings from Labour’s looming death tax raid means increasing numbers of wealthy pensioners are considering taking the risk. Should you join them?

Continue reading

 

The true depth of Churchill and Elizabeth II’s friendship

Winston Churchill with Prince Charles, Queen Elizabeth II and Princess Anne

Published exclusively for the first time, these images show Winston Churchill with Prince Charles, Queen Elizabeth II and Princess Anne at Balmoral in October 1952

When I first began to write about the relationship between Winston Churchill and Queen Elizabeth II, it was their official interactions that interested me, writes Nigel Fletcher. I wanted to tell the story of how the veteran prime minister and his government reacted to the sudden change of monarch, and how the new Queen adjusted to taking on the duties of Sovereign. As I delved into private papers and government archives, it was the personal dimension that increasingly drew me in.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

A man’s guide to linen, the summer’s most divisive fabric

‘Linen isn’t supposed to look pristine. It’s supposed to look like you’re enjoying the summer,’ says Nick Harding

Think linen is only for Riviera holidays or crumpled clichés? Think again. As temperatures rise, the summer staple is enjoying a revival, with smarter styling making it easier than ever to wear well. Nick Harding explains how to master linen without looking rumpled.

Continue reading

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

 

CAPTION COMPETITION WITH...

Matt Cartoon
Matt Pritchett

Matt Pritchett

Cartoonist

 

Hello! No new caption competition today, but this week’s winner is from our reigning champion, Andy Shuttleworth. Congratulations Andy!

P.S. For an inside look at what inspires my weekly cartoons, you can sign up for my personal subscriber-exclusive newsletter here.

 

Your say

Square eyes

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...
Whenever I’m weighing up whether or not to devote a chunk of my life to a new TV series, I usually ask myself: “Is it going to be as good as The Sopranos?” The result is that I end up rewatching The Sopranos instead.

I exaggerate only a little. Sure, there has been some enjoyable television in recent years – and I’ve always got time for a truly moronic Netflix thriller – but I am inclined to agree with Gareth Roberts that we are some way from the high watermark of the Noughties, a decade that also gave us everything from Breaking Bad to Peep Show.

I do have a confession, though: I find The Wire very slightly overrated, and will now run for cover.


 

Many readers, by contrast, have singled it out for praise. N Phillips wrote: “We only recently watched all five seasons. It is a masterpiece. Many series get tired after a few seasons. Not this one.”


 

John Atkins added: “Without a doubt The Wire is one of the best series I’ve ever watched. It took a while to get into the language but was well worth it.”


 

For James Steel, meanwhile, “The Sopranos is the best ever. James Gandolfini really was a very special actor. Still sad he died so young.”


 

Joanna Gilou put in a word for “Mad Men, which was incredible. The creator worked for David Chase on The Sopranos and it showed. Unlike a lot of American stuff, it treated the audience as intelligent adults. I’m rewatching The Sopranos for the sixth time and Mad Men for the fourth. Yes, I know I need to get out more, but they are both mesmerising.”


 

A dissenting voice came from Russell Wright: “The Noughties were probably marginally better than now, but they were still awful compared with preceding decades. Consider British comedies such as The Likely Lads, Porridge, Rising Damp, The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, Yes Minister, Monty Python, Only Fools and Horses...

For drama there was I, Claudius, Upstairs, Downstairs, Inspector Morse, War and Peace, The Duchess of Duke Street and To Serve Them All My Days. I could go on. Maybe it’s to do with what you are brought up with, but I don’t think so.”

Which TV series comes top for you? 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

1483 | Richard III is crowned King of England at Westminster Abbey

2002
| Serena Williams beats older sister Venus to win her first Wimbledon singles title

2022 | Boris Johnson faces a slew of resignations as pressure mounts on him to quit (see our front page from the following day)

Birthdays
: Jennifer Saunders (68), George W. Bush (80), Dalai Lama (91)

Telegraph front page

Plus, in the news today, a rubber chicken has become the unlikely mascot for the US World Cup team. What is its name?

Rubber chicken

Chris Richards adopted the chicken as an unofficial mascot for Crystal Palace and has taken it to the World Cup

1. Paxo
2. Oxo
3. Clutch
4. Maple

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 NUMBERING. 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 at fromtheeditor@telegraph.co.uk.

Thank you for reading. Have a fulfilling day and I hope to see you tomorrow.

Chris Evans, Editor

All Access: Just 25p per month

Enjoy free-thinking journalism, daily puzzles and more with your email-exclusive offer.

 

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

Unsubscribe from this newsletter.

Update your preferences.

If you are a Telegraph subscriber and are asked to sign in when you click the links in our newsletters, please log in and click "accept cookies". This will ensure you can access The Telegraph uninterrupted in the future.

For any other questions, please visit our help page here.

Any offers included in this email come with their own Terms and Conditions, which you can see by clicking on the offer link. We may withdraw offers without notice.

Telegraph Media Group Holdings Limited or its group companies - 111 Buckingham Palace Road, London SW1W 0DT. Registered in England under No 14551860.

dimanche 5 juillet 2026

For Archie and Lilibet, it’s now or never

The real story of Andy Burnham’s Manchester | The lifestyle clashes that could wreck your marriage
 ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏

Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Sunday, 5 July 2026

Issue No. 490

Good morning.

Montecito has never felt further from Buckingham Palace. Despite an olive branch from the King who offered to let Prince Harry and his family stay in a protected royal residence, the Duke of Sussex has decided at the 11th hour not to bring the Duchess, Prince Archie or Princess Lilibet to London.

As Hannah Furness, our Royal Editor, explains, amid the security dispute, one thing is clear: for the King to ever truly know his grandchildren, the time is now or never.

Elsewhere, later this month Andy Burnham will almost certainly become our next prime minister. He has ridden into No 10 on the back of his supposedly faultless record as the mayor of Greater Manchester. But, as Rosa Silverman reveals, some Mancunians are not so enamoured of a man they see as just another purveyor of decline.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

P.S. We’re giving email readers four months of The Telegraph for just 25p per month. If you’re already a subscriber make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Britain’s youth jobs crisis is now existential. The Dutch know how to fix it

Six lifestyle clashes that could wreck your marriage (and how to solve them)

Plus, the trick to watering your garden during a heatwave

All Access: Just 25p per month

Enjoy free-thinking journalism, daily puzzles and more with your email-exclusive offer.

 

For Archie and Lilibet to meet the King, it’s now or never

Prince Harry announced last-minute that the Duchess of Sussex and their children would not accompany him on his trip to London

Hannah Furness

Hannah Furness

Royal Editor

 

The last time the King saw his Sussex grandchildren in person, he was not the King. In the four long years since, there have been emotive words from Prince Harry about how much he would love them to meet, but no meeting.

The Prince’s security in Britain, he has said, is not sufficient.

This week, it seemed as if things would finally change: he was bringing the Duchess, Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet to his homeland.

Despite all the drama, the accusations and the public airing of Royal family laundry by the Sussexes, the King has never cut his younger son off. Buckingham Palace invited Harry to bring his family to stay at a royal residence, and aides searched for time in the diary to make it work.

Could Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet finally bridge the gap between the Royal family and its Montecito outliers?

Not yet. At the 11th hour, Harry has pulled the plug on bringing his family to London, citing security.

The Duchess and Duke of Sussex with daughter Lilibet on her fifth birthday

For the Duke’s opponents, it is further evidence of “emotional blackmail” aimed at the King. For his fans, it is a further stick to beat Charles III with: how could he not intervene on security (even though he is constitutionally unable to do so)?

The resulting circus has guaranteed only one thing: all eyes will be on the Sussexes this week.
Continue reading

 

The real story of Andy Burnham’s Manchester

Rosa Silverman

Rosa Silverman

Senior Feature Writer

 

From the 16th floor of Hanover Towers in Stockport, you can see the soaring skyscrapers of central Manchester.

They rise, six miles to the north, as shining beacons of modernity: glass and concrete monuments to progress. A story of post-industrial northern prosperity written on the skyline.

It is one story, anyway. The one that undoubtedly helped Andy Burnham glide from mayor of Greater Manchester to Labour MP for Makerfield and heir apparent to the beleaguered Sir Keir Starmer.

What, though, is life like for those in the towns outside Manchester, across the north-western region of England where Burnham, erstwhile King of the North, has reigned these past nine years?

The Greater Manchester Combined Authority (GMCA) Burnham led boasts that in the past decade, it has become the UK’s fastest-growing economy. Meanwhile, data suggest that this growth has been unevenly distributed.

Were you to visit some of the smaller towns outside Manchester, conversations would soon turn to what has gone wrong, not right.

According to one local in the Lancashire Hill area of Stockport, “we’ve got more crackheads, more homeless people and more troublemakers”.

It was, she says, a “lovely, very quiet neighbourhood” when she moved here 12 years ago. “It’s got worse [since],” she adds.

This report is available only to subscribers.
Read the full article here

 

Opinion

Kemi Badenoch Headshot

Kemi Badenoch

Andy Burnham has already fallen into the Labour trap

We can’t properly fund our Armed Forces in these dangerous times by raising growth-destroying taxes

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Con Coughlin</span> Headshot

Con Coughlin

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s funeral exposes the paranoia of Iran’s crumbling regime

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Janet Daley</span> Headshot

Janet Daley

The white working class may still be its own greatest enemy

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

To make sure you don’t miss our newsletters when they land in your inbox, click here.


In other news

The US president speaks during the ‘Salute to America’ Independence Day celebration

Summer of sport

World Cup drama for England alongside Wimbledon joy and rugby misery

Fans prepare to party in Central London

Oliver Brown

Oliver Brown

Chief Sports Writer, in Mexico City

 

It promises to be a day and a night unlike any other for England at the World Cup.

At 6pm local time here in Mexico City, and 1am at home, Thomas Tuchel and his players will enter the most fervent and intoxicating arena any of them have ever experienced, trying to reach the quarter-finals in defiance of overwhelming hostility from an entire nation.

Everything is stacked against them in this last-16 duel with co-hosts Mexico at the Azteca Stadium, the hosts’ iconic fortress, from the lung-burning altitude to the predicted violent thunderstorms.

With over 80,000 Mexican fans expected in the ground and a million more on the streets outside, England are heading into the teeth of a hurricane.
Continue reading

England fans embrace Mexico’s second great passion

Scoreboard
Chris Bascombe

Chris Bascombe

Sports Reporter, at Wimbledon

 

An epic comeback victory for Arthur Fery proved British tennis still had a pulse to keep the flag flying into the second week.

Having shunned the showier venues, Fery brought the court of King Arthur to Wimbledon, every vantage point taken as he reversed what seemed a hopeless cause, to defeat Belgian Zizou Berges in five sets.

The longest match at this year’s championship thrilled a crowd of 750 seated fans, with many more trying to sneak a peak from the balconies as word spread of Fery’s heroics.

The 22-year-old, who is of French descent but grew up five minutes from the Wimbledon site, literally shed blood for the cause. On several occasions play was paused as Fery was treated for a nosebleed.

After breaking into the top 100 for the first time, Fery has his eye on Centre Court for the round of 16 tie.

“I’ve loved Court 18, but it’s time to move on. Now that I’ve had a few matches I feel ready for a bigger court,” he said.
Continue reading ➤

Arthur Fery produced an incredible performance to stay in Wimbledon

Gavin Mairs

Gavin Mairs

Chief Rugby Union Correspondent, at Ellis Park

 

It was meant to be the moment when England demonstrated that their lessons had been learned from their humbling Six Nations campaign. But at Ellis Park in Johannesburg, a mile above sea level, Steve Borthwick’s side ended their opening Nations Championship match looking like they are still miles behind world champions South Africa. England were completely outplayed in the second half, heaping pressure on Borthwick and underlining the need for a victory against Fiji in Liverpool next Saturday.
Continue reading ➤

 

Weekend reads

Britain’s youth jobs crisis is now existential. The Dutch know how to fix it

Brothers Bram and Niek Koning are exemplary apprentices in road building, writes Melissa Lawford. It feels surprising that they were recently both school drop-outs. If they lived in Britain, they would have fallen through the net and joined the more than one million 16 to 24-year-olds who are not in employment, education or training (Neet). The Konings live in the Netherlands, the country with the lowest Neet rate in Europe, which has caught the eye as a potential policy blueprint on the other side of the North Sea.

For subscribers only

 
The former Williams driver won at Silverstone four times

The former Williams driver won at Silverstone four times

Nigel Mansell: The doctor told me I had an hour to live

Nigel Mansell was known during his career for his daredevil driving. At 72, he remains a force of nature. Before today’s British Grand Prix at Silverstone, the 1992 F1 world champion spoke to Tom Cary about “Mansell-mania”, how he nearly died on a golf course and what drives him in his eighth decade.

Continue reading

 

Different approaches to drinking, spending and exercise can put strain on a long-term relationship

Six lifestyle clashes that could wreck your marriage (and how to solve them)

Are you an early bird married to a night owl? Or a gym obsessive in love with a couch potato? It’s a couples cliché that opposites attract, but certain mismatches can put strain on a relationship. These are the six lifestyle clashes that could wreck any marriage, and how to solve them.

Continue reading

 

Your Sunday

The trick to watering your garden during a heatwave

Tom Brown says watering is a job best done in the morning

With hose-pipe bans either in force or on the horizon, watering becomes one of the most important jobs in the garden, writes Tom Brown. It is something to do first thing in the morning, as plants process water when they’re actively growing. Although you can saturate the ground at night, our flowers, herbs and bushes don’t actually need it then. Once wetted, cover your ground with well-rotted compost or even cardboard (especially in greenhouses) to avoid evaporation from exposed soil.

Continue reading

 

Devil’s Advocate

Sydney Sweeney is not a girl’s girl

Poppie Platt

Poppie Platt

 

If 1985’s Weird Science were made now – against a backdrop of Andrew Tate-loving boys smashing their pimple-dotted faces with chisels to “looksmaxx” – the protagonist would be Sydney Sweeney.

The 28-year-old actress is what patriarchy’s dreams are made of, manufactured for the male gaze. She moonlights as a car mechanic! She loves jet skis and country music! She adores showing off her ahem, assets, especially in her hit HBO series Euphoria.

The only thing Sweeney enjoys more than rubbing her God-given cleavage in our faces? Insisting any feminist quick to criticise her gratuitous sex scenes in the coming-of-age drama (written and directed by a man) is jealous or missing the point. In an interview with Vanity Fair, she says Euphoria’s creator Sam Levinson asked whether she would prefer to shoot scenes without “any nudity”. She refused, saying: “I’m an actor and that’s my job.”

That’s where she misses the point. Of course Sweeney is welcome to strip off on screen – women are, and should be, free to do what they want with their bodies. The issue is that Sweeney’s talent is beginning to play second fiddle to her pretty face. Early in her career, she chose genuinely interesting projects – The Handmaid’s Tale, or Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood. Since making the A-list, however, she has resorted to so-so romcoms (Anyone But You), schlocky horrors (Immaculate) and downright-awful superhero blockbusters (Madame Web) in pursuit of box-office dominance.

Largely, these have flopped, because what Sweeney forgets is that to become a Hollywood star with allure, you have to be likeable. Tom Hanks, Will Smith and Julia Roberts all have popularity in common. Sweeney, meanwhile, is decidedly unpopular, especially among women, meaning she has no core audience to depend on.

Many believe Sweeney’s unpopularity in Hollywood is due to her politics – she is a registered Republican – but it’s much simpler than that. She does not seem like a “girl’s girl”, so women don’t pay to support her. Scoff at that all you will, but if her next film opens to more half-empty cinemas, perhaps she’ll begin to understand that appealing to her own gender is not so bad, after all.

Do you agree with Poppie? Send your replies here, and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of this newsletter.

 

One great life

Rodney Atkinson, brother of Rowan and leading Eurosceptic

In the 1980s, Rodney Atkinson took the view that even Margaret Thatcher was not committed enough to Thatcherism

Rodney Atkinson, who has died aged 78, was at various times a lecturer in linguistics, a merchant banker and the co-founder of a company that released vintage radio recordings on cassette. Through it all, his greatest passion remained Eurosceptic politics and his biggest claim to fame (as he cheerfully admitted) was that he was Rowan Atkinson’s brother, writes Andrew M Brown, Obituaries Editor.

For half a century he was a punchy contributor to The Telegraph’s Letters page. In a typical broadside, he proposed that readers fed up with the BBC and its “journalistic incompetence” should seek a cheaper licence fee by swapping their colour TV sets for black and white: “This will save them £47 and will reduce by that amount the funding of the most important source of Left-wing propaganda in Britain today.”

In 2000, he entered the contest to become leader of Ukip and lost by just 16 votes. He couldn’t convince his Left-leaning brother Rowan to endorse his campaigns, but he was proud of Rowan’s defence of free speech.

Atkinson produced hundreds of articles and papers and a stream of books with sensational titles such as Treason at Maastricht.
Read his remarkable obituary here

 

On this day

1865 | Britain introduces first speed-limit law: 4mph in rural areas, 2mph in towns

1945 | The Labour Party under Clement Attlee wins British parliamentary elections (see below for our front page from the day after – results were not declared until July 27)

1994 | Amazon.com is founded by Jeff Bezos in Bellevue, Washington

2024 | Sir Keir Starmer succeeds Rishi Sunak after a landslide victory for Labour

Birthdays:
Marc Cohn (67), Edie Falco (63), Joe Lycett (38)

Front page
 

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 HOMICIDAL. 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 at fromtheeditor@telegraph.co.uk.

All Access: Just 25p per month

Enjoy free-thinking journalism, daily puzzles and more with your email-exclusive offer.

 

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

Unsubscribe from this newsletter.

Update your preferences.

If you are a Telegraph subscriber and are asked to sign in when you click the links in our newsletters, please log in and click "accept cookies". This will ensure you can access The Telegraph uninterrupted in the future.

For any other questions, please visit our help page here.

Any offers included in this email come with their own Terms and Conditions, which you can see by clicking on the offer link. We may withdraw offers without notice.

Telegraph Media Group Holdings Limited or its group companies - 111 Buckingham Palace Road, London SW1W 0DT. Registered in England under No 14551860.