dimanche 19 juillet 2026

What next for Starmer

Toby Young on cancel culture | ‘Boomers have earned the right to live the high life’
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Sunday, 19 July 2026

Issue No. 504

Good morning.

Today is Sir Keir Starmer’s final day as Prime Minister before he hands the reins over to Andy Burnham tomorrow. So, what will he do next? Guy Kelly, ever the willing participant, is happy to moonlight as Starmer’s career coach. Below, he takes a sideways look at what life outside of No 10 could look like for the soon-to-be former PM.

Elsewhere, over the past few weeks we have serialised Josh Kerr’s race to break the record for the fastest mile. As you’ll have read from our exclusive behind-the-scenes access, he left no stone unturned in his preparation. Yesterday was the big day. Would he deliver on his promise? Boy, did he. Jeremy Wilson has the definitive read on Kerr’s monumental achievement.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

P.S. Don’t miss this season’s hottest offer. Try a whole year of The Telegraph for £19 – only in our Summer Sale. If you’re already a subscriber make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Toby Young: ‘Unlike Christianity, cancel culture is a religion without forgiveness’

Boomers: We’ve earned the right to live the high life (even if our children disagree)

Plus, 25 old-fashioned (but fantastic) things to do with kids this summer

Summer Sale: One year for just £19

Think outside your inbox. Unlock full access to our free-thinking journalism, plus thousands of fun puzzles.

 

Starmer’s eight options for life after Downing Street

Starmer cartoon

As Sir Keir Starmer’s time in No 10 comes to an end, we weigh up his next career options

Guy Kelly

Guy Kelly

 

“This is the end of my political journey,” Sir Keir Starmer told the House of Commons on Wednesday, at his final PMQs.

Tomorrow, Andy Burnham, having already abdicated as King of the North and become the new Labour leader, will take Starmer’s other job as prime minister.

With that, one black, shiny door closes for Starmer, but another surely opens. Hale and hearty at 63, as an enthusiastic promoter of both hard graft and raising the retirement age, he undoubtedly has another act in him, but what will it involve?

Remarkably, Starmer will become our ninth living former prime minister. Glancing at the day-to-day activities of that illustrious group, there’s clearly no blueprint for what an ex-PM is meant to do.

Sir Tony Blair has his global institute. Liz Truss has her podcast. Boris Johnson has his children... so, so many children. The world is Starmer’s oyster, then, and with that in mind, I’ve attempted to analyse some of his options.

Could he stay in politics, but switch sides? Could he and Rachel Reeves start the least interesting podcast of all time? Could he embrace the TV career his head of hair has always deserved? He promised change, now let’s see how he transforms himself...
For subscribers only

Burnham’s best hope of success is a snap election

Burnham to scrap digital ID cards

 

Josh Kerr breaks mile world record – this is how he did it

Josh Kerr has broken Hicham El Guerrouj’s 27-year-old mile world record

Jeremy Wilson

Jeremy Wilson

Chief Sports Reporter, at the London Stadium

 

It was like ‘Super Saturday’ at the 2012 Olympics all over again.

Some 60,000 were packed into the London Stadium, Lord Coe was trackside, the eyes of the athletics world were on London and the sports-loving British public roared home an achievement that will be written in athletics history.

Seventy-two years on from Sir Roger Bannister’s first four-minute mile, Josh Kerr has brought the iconic world mile record back to Great Britain. Like Sir Roger, the feat was also achieved on British soil, toppling a record that had stood since 1999 set by middle-distance running great Hicham El Guerrouj.

The noise could apparently be heard all the way to Basildon. The Telegraph was there to witness history being made and has been there every step of the way during Kerr’s training camp, documenting every little detail on what it takes to become the world’s fastest man over one mile.

With the momentous occassion also beamed around the nation live on BBC One, this was the shot in the arm athletics needed. The Commonwealth Games begin next week where Scotland’s Kerr will be one of the main events as he attempts to beat his own mile record.

But first, he will bask in the glory of a truly special moment for British athletics.
Continue reading

 

Summer of sport

How England wins saved Tuchel and Borthwick from the sack

Bukayo Saka, centre, completes his hat-trick in the bronze medal match

The England cricket team does not currently have a head coach, and heading into this weekend it seemed possible the same might soon be true of the football and rugby teams.

So for that reason, impressive wins for Thomas Tuchel’s men against France – a thrilling 6-4 win that secured third place at the World Cup – and Steve Borthwick’s rugby side in Argentina will go a long way to securing their positions.

Jamie George, the England rugby captain, clashes with Argentina’s Matias Moroni in the closing stages of the match

There are still serious pangs of regret, though, not least at the World Cup. Bukayo Saka’s hat-trick against France only begged the question – why did he not play against Argentina in that semi-final defeat?

As for The Open, we have to hope local hero Tommy Fleetwood turns it on if we are to have a British winner at Royal Birkdale. The Englishman is five adrift of leader Sam Burns.

Tommy Fleetwood facing tough ask to end 57 years of Open hurt

Nine reasons England vs France was an all-time World Cup classic

 

Opinion

Janet Daley Headshot

Janet Daley

Is there any decency left in British politics? Well, yes and some screwball comedy

The eccentricity of Count Binface and the generosity of spirit shown to Starmer’s last PMQs are reasons for optimism

Continue reading

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

Kemi Badenoch

The House of Lords is not an honours system

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Jake Wallis Simons</span> Headshot

Jake Wallis Simons

Trump is sliding into a forever war with Iran

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Weekend reads

Lord Young: ‘I think Burnham may actually turn out to be worse than Keir Starmer in terms of free speech’

‘Unlike Christianity, cancel culture is a religion without forgiveness,’ says Toby Young

Sipping flat whites in his west London garden, Lord Young is celebrating a milestone: his Free Speech Union has now fought over 6,000 cases. Yet the scars of his own spectacular 2018 cancellation still run deep. He warns that cancel culture is a “religion without forgiveness” and explains why he recently refused to defend one high-profile union member.

For subscribers only

 
Well-off boomers and their struggling children: illustration

Younger generations believe they have it harder than their boomer parents

Boomers: We’ve earned the right to live the high life (even if our children disagree)

After writing in this newsletter about bitter millennials resenting their boomer parents’ lavish lifestyles, my own mother and father quickly set the record straight. They reminded me of our 1980s London basement flat and cheap ferry crossings to France, arguing they had now earned the right to live a little. Thousands of Telegraph readers agreed, recalling 14 per cent mortgages, £5 food budgets and post-war unemployment. Now, they are swapping grandparent duties for African sunrises and refuse to feel guilty about it.

Continue reading

 

What I’m doing at 56 so I can be strong in my 80s

Zora Benhamou, a gerontologist, wants to stay strong enough to travel, lift her own suitcase and live independently into her 80s

As a gerontologist, people expect me to say I want to live to 120, writes Zora Benhamou, a 56-year-old longevity expert. I’m not chasing eternal youth, but merely practising daily habits now to ensure a better old age. Here’s the things I do – from using blood flow restriction bands to learning a new language – to protect my future.

Continue reading

 

Your Sunday

25 old-fashioned (but fantastic) things to do with kids this summer

Affordable activities may be the key to summer fun

The school holidays are here and British children are facing the luxuriant prospect of six long and languorous weeks of fun-packed freedom. Now, British parents are gearing up to keep those children entertained. Our summertime guide has a list of affordable (or free) classic activities families will love.

Continue reading

 

Devil’s Advocate

No film needs to be three hours’ long

Odyssey
Anita Singh

Anita Singh

Arts and Entertainment Editor

 

The Odyssey reviews are in. Our own Robbie Collin calls it “astonishing”, “thrilling” and “trailblazing”. For other critics, Sir Christopher Nolan’s film is “staggering”, “jaw-detaching”, “transporting” and “epically satisfying”. Do you know what else it is? At least an hour too long.

I don’t say this because I’m a philistine who has failed to appreciate the brilliance of Homer’s storytelling. As it happens, I’m reading a translation of The Odyssey right now (Daniel Mendelsohn’s version, very good). It’s because no film needs to be nearly three hours long. The Odyssey clocks in at two hours and 52 minutes. Nolan’s fanboys will say that his masterworks deserve this screentime. They said the same about his last film, Oppenheimer, which went on for three hours. It took home the Best Picture Oscar. Did it deserve to win? No idea. I went to see Barbie (114 minutes) instead.

Epics are long by their very nature. I understand that. Great for a book, or oral storytelling around the fire outside your thatched hut. Not for films. It’s why I’ve never watched Lawrence of Arabia, The Greatest Story Ever Told, Ben-Hur or Gone with the Wind from start to finish, but have somehow pieced them together after catching the beginning, middle and end – not necessarily in that order – on TV over the years.

This refusal to cut films down to size isn’t restricted to epics. The last film I saw in the cinema was Wuthering Heights, because I wanted to see how terrible it was (answer: very). That was two hours and 16 minutes, and I spent the final 45 minutes willing Cathy to hurry up and die. Yes, there are now fancy cinemas with reclining seats and footrests, but you’re still stuck in your seat for the duration. Have these filmmakers never heard of deep vein thrombosis?

Two hours should be the cutoff. As a child of the ‘80s, I regularly re-watch beloved films from that decade. Raiders of the Lost Ark, Top Gun, Blade Runner – all told in under two hours. Their 21st-century sequels? All longer.

There are exceptions to every rule. Titanic runs for more than three hours but gets a pass because James Cameron wanted the disaster scenes to happen in real time (it took two hours and 40 minutes for the ship to sink, and he had to bookend that with the soppy Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio bits). I was surprised to look up Die Hard and see its running time is 132 minutes, because the action whips by. Most long films, though – looking at you, Christopher Nolan – could simply do with a brisk edit. Lop a bit off those battle scenes, squeeze the number of times Matt Damon looks miserably out to sea. No one will notice.

I’m off to the cinema this weekend. I shall walk past the hordes queuing for an Odyssey screening and settle down with my son to watch the new Minions movie. Will it offer the sense of awe promised by Nolan’s epic? I somehow doubt it. However, I’ll be home before the Trojans have realised there’s something iffy about that horse.

 

One great life

Dinkie Flowers, ‘ice acrobat’ who wowed 1950s audiences and competed in The Greatest Dancer aged 98

Dinkie Flowers celebrating her 101st birthday by dancing with Sir Lindsay Hoyle at Speaker’s House in 2022

Dinkie Flowers, who has died aged 105, was a dancer and skater who was billed in the 1940s as “England’s only ice acrobat”. She started out in the 1930s with a ragtime outfit whose piano was reinforced so she could dance on it. As a skater she was banned from Spain when the Franco government condemned her can-can as too “sensual”. She did the Dance of the Seven Veils on ice, and when Prince Philip saw her perform he sent her a letter of congratulation.

She became a regular in the fashionable “ice pantomimes” of the 1950s and ice-danced for six months as part of a British cultural project in Iraq, where she taught King Faisal II to skate. She married the manager of the Raymond Revuebar in Soho and ran a dance school in Shoreham-by-Sea for half a century. Her work included choreographing Perseus and Andromeda, a light opera written by the astronomer Patrick Moore.

Dinkie Flowers

Dinkie Flowers: her routines included a version of the Dance of the Seven Veils on ice

Dinkie competed against dancers a fifth of her age in Simon Cowell’s The Greatest Dancer, aged 98, and on her 101st birthday persuaded the Sir Lindsay Hoyle to dance with her during a visit to Westminster. She elected to leave Speaker’s House by sliding down the banister rather than taking the stairs. She carried on dancing into her final year: “From the age of three I have danced and have never stopped,” she said. “I am not likely to until they take me out in a box.”
Read her full obituary here

 

On this day

1545 | Henry VIII’s flagship, the Mary Rose, sinks off the coast of Portsmouth

1941 | Winston Churchill launches his “V for Victory” campaign

1954 |
Elvis Presley’s debut single, a cover of Arthur Crudup’s That’s All Right, is released

1969 | Apollo 11 goes into lunar orbit (and our front page the following day below)

Birthdays: Benedict Cumberbatch (50), David Lammy (54), Vitali Klitschko (55), Sir Brian May (79)

Front page
 

Puzzles

The Telegraph has released a range of bite-sized puzzles perfect for a two-minute mental workout on the go. To celebrate, we are bringing you a different one each day this week. Today, for the last instalment, try our Mini Panagram.

P.S. If you’re missing the Panagram, rest assured it will return tomorrow, and in the meantime you can play today’s here.

 

Thank you for reading.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

P.S. Please share your thoughts on the newsletter at fromtheeditor@telegraph.co.uk.

Summer Sale: One year for just £19

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