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Saturday, February 21, 2026

Andrew’s arrest: Get exclusive analysis in our newsletter

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Dear Reader,

On Thursday, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was taken into custody by police, following a raid at his Sandringham home.

The former prince is the first senior member of the Royal family to be arrested in modern history.

Gain exclusive insight into this seismic turn of events with The Telegraph’s renowned Royal Editor, Hannah Furness. Sign up free for Your Royal Appointment today and get Hannah’s newsletter delivered to your inbox, with special editions every day this week.

 
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Friday, February 20, 2026

This is how to save a monarchy

How many healthy years do you have left? | The Ayatollah will try to unleash carnage if the US attacks
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Saturday, 21 February 2026

Issue No. 363

Good morning.

A day after his arrest, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor faces being cut from the line of succession. The Royal family is staring at a disaster that insiders say is in danger of bringing down the house.

Hannah Furness, our Royal Editor, reports on another dramatic 24 hours and reveals what Palace sources say the King must do to save the Firm. For exclusive analysis throughout this royal crisis, sign up to Hannah’s newsletter here.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try one year of The Telegraph for £25, including all the articles in this newsletter. If you are already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

How many healthy years do you have left? Use our tool to find out

Iran has 1,500 missiles. If the US attacks, the Ayatollah will try to launch them all

Plus, what really happened the night Marilyn Monroe died

We believe in freedom.

Free press. Free speech. Free markets. If you share these values, join us today.

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The King’s to-do list:
☐ Take the blinkers off
☐ Modernise
☐ Deal with the ‘spares’

Hannah Furness

Hannah Furness

Royal Editor

 

Just when you thought there was no further for him to fall, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor looks set to be removed from the line of royal succession.

It will be fiendishly complicated to do it, requiring the agreement of the 15 Commonwealth realms over which the King reigns, and will open a can of worms about the monarchy in each and every one.

It is testament to the strength of feeling about the former prince that politicians have put a removal from the line of succession on the table, and the Palace has made clear it will not object to such a move.

The royal line of succession

Once we had a chance to take a breath after the breaking news of his arrest on Thursday, I had a moment to wonder just how the former prince and the Palace have ended up here.

The result is an in-depth anatomy of what went wrong, according to clear-eyed sources who know and (mostly) admire generations of the Royal family.

There are “green shoots” of change, says one insider. In this one respect – preventing another scandal of this magnitude – those green shoots can’t come soon enough.
Continue reading

Sign up to Hannah’s newsletter for daily analysis on the Royal crisis here

Andrew faces being cut from line of succession

Why the Sussexes are staying quiet over Andrew’s arrest

 

Opinion

Charles Moore Headshot

Charles Moore

The West can make Russia’s war unwinnable – we only need the will

Britain has become an unserious ally, but we have it in our power to prevent another four years of bloodshed

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Robert Tombs</span> Headshot

Robert Tombs

Crisis, what crisis? The monarchy has been through far worse than this

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Katie Musgrave</span> Headshot

Katie Musgrave

I’m a doctor. I would never use weight-loss jabs

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Manjit Sangha underwent a quadruple amputation after contracting sepsis, possibly as a result of a dog lick

weekend reads

Gorton and Denton is a dismal preview of the future of broken Britain

Denton local Viv won’t vote for Labour this time, but says Nigel Farage gives her the ‘creeps’

Longsight, an inner-city area of Manchester, was the working-class birthplace of Oasis. Today, it is only 23 per cent white, with Muslim voters leaning heavily to the Left and electing a Workers Party councillor in 2024. Three miles east, Denton remains 83 per cent white, its residents navigating boarded-up shops and abandoned roadworks while leaning towards Reform. With a boundary marking out the vague shape of a battle axe on the map, these alienated worlds face a bitter by-election. Caught in a brutal pincer movement from parties on the Left and the Right, Labour faces a defeat that could shake Britain’s political foundations. Annabel Denham, our Senior Political Commentator, reports.
Continue reading

Plus,
sign up to our Politics newsletter for must-read analysis from Annabel and Allister Heath

 

How many healthy years do you have left? Use our tool to find out

The mismatch between lifespan (the number of years we’re alive) and healthspan (the number of years we live in good health) is growing in Britain. Despite Britons living for longer, health is declining earlier. Our interactive tool reveals how many years you can expect to be in good health and, vitally, what you can do to maintain it.

We’re always working to ensure a Telegraph subscription is a wise investment, and this piece is part of that effort. If you haven’t joined us yet, just click through and subscribe to read about how to support your health.

Continue reading

 

Iran has 1,500 missiles. If the US attacks, the Ayatollah will try to launch them all

If Donald Trump strikes Iran, the new war would be far more dangerous than previous conflicts, writes David Blair. With the Islamic Republic’s survival at stake, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei would hit back with everything he has. That includes 1,500 ballistic missiles – and he would need to use them before America destroys them. Since the whole Middle East lies within range, Iran’s arsenal could inflict terrible carnage.

For subscribers only

 

Monroe’s image still pervades our culture many decades after her death

What really happened the night Marilyn died

This year would have marked Marilyn Monroe’s 100th birthday. Yet more than 60 years after the event, her death continues to fuel conspiracy theories. Was it an accidental overdose, a suicide or a murder? What really was the nature of her relationship with John F Kennedy, and is there any truth in the whispers that Robert Kennedy played a part in her death? Andrew Wilson draws from previously unpublished letters, tapes and interviews with those who were with her on the final night – her housekeeper, publicist, psychiatrist and doctor – to reveal what really happened in Marilyn’s final 24 hours.

Continue reading

 

Toni and Gareth Morgan had bought Premium Bonds on behalf of their son, Fin

‘Our eight-year-old just won £100,000 in Premium Bonds’

Fin Morgan might just be Britain’s luckiest eight-year-old. He recently won £100,000 in the Premium Bonds prize draw, with the six-figure sum paid tax-free. While plane-mad Fin would love to spend it on flights, his parents have other ideas, which could save him from student debt in future, or help buy his first home.

Continue reading

 

Your Saturday

 

Diana’s Weekend table

Bring on the warmth

Normandy apple tart

Diana Henry

Diana Henry

The Telegraph’s award-winning cookery writer

 

This weekend, given the weather we’ve had recently, all I’m thinking about is warmth. The sun has appeared – milky and cold – a few times this past week, but I don’t trust it. I could also jinx things by daring to cook for warmer weather, for brighter skies. I nearly always yearn for apple tart and today it’s going to be a French one. It looks so good that most people can’t believe that it’s home-made. Very satisfying.

Neua tom kem (slow-cooked Thai beef)

Dinner tomorrow night will be a braise, something that cooks slowly in the oven, the oven itself warming the kitchen. I dream about eating this Thai dish – neua tom kem – from friend and food writer Kay Plunkett-Hogge. She grew up in Thailand and has an encyclopaedic knowledge of the country’s food. I used to eat it in her small kitchen, other Thai dishes balanced precariously around it. The recipe is in her book, Baan (meaning ‘home’). It’s so good I’ll be cooking it for the rest of my life. Keep the recipe!

Estonian chicken soup with caraway dumplings

I will need soup on Monday and Tuesday, something to continue to warm me, and I crave this chicken soup with caraway dumplings. I appreciate that my dish suggestions today are jumping all over the place – France, Thailand and now Estonia. I have stock in the freezer, the vegetables for this are nearly always around, and I will make the dumplings – tiny and not stodgy – on Monday. The kitchen windows will fog up as I make all this. Happy days, nevermind the weather.

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

Happy cooking!

 

Andrew Baker’s Saturday Quiz

Saturday Quiz questions


Gather round for the latest instalment of my Saturday quiz.

  1. On this date in 1797, 1,400 troops landed at Fishguard or Abergwaun in Wales. What nationality were the invaders?
  2. What kind of fish was the record-breaking “monster” caught by a binman from east London in a lake in Essex in 2024?
  3. Monster, Green and Automatic for the People are all albums by which rock band?
  4. Greenland is the world’s largest island. Which is the second largest?
  5. Which fictional organisation is based on Tracy Island?
 

You can find the answers at the end of the newsletter.

 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including PlusWord, Sorted, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was AUTOMATED. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

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

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Please send me your thoughts on this newsletter. You can email me here.

Quiz answers:

  1. French
  2. Catfish
  3. REM
  4. New Guinea
  5. International Rescue
 

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