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Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Today could finish Starmer

Civil servants ‘abusing flexi time’ to claim 50 days off a year | The ultimate home workout for toned arms by summer
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Thursday, 7 May 2026

Issue No. 438

Good morning.

Millions will go to the polls today in elections that are expected to change the political landscape overnight and could trigger an immediate challenge to Sir Keir Starmer’s premiership. Gordon Rayner, our Associate Editor, explains what might lie ahead for the embattled Prime Minister.

Elsewhere, Noah Eastwood reveals that civil servants have been “abusing flexi time” to claim 50 days off a year. We also have the latest on both the Iran war and the rat-virus ship.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Telegraph readers can now enjoy a year’s access 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

Polanski, the Lib Dem turncoat, hopes for yet another reinvention

Civil servants ‘abusing flexi time’ to claim 50 days off a year

Plus, ‘I’ve given up on living in Britain. Here’s why I think America is the answer’

Enjoy a whole year for £1.99 per month

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

 

What happens today could finish Starmer

Sir Keir Starmer calls voters from the Labour Party headquarters on the last day of campaigning

Gordon Rayner

Gordon Rayner

Associate Editor

 

Will today finally be the day that brings down the curtain on the Starmer premiership?

All the talk ahead of today’s local council elections (and Holyrood and Senedd elections in Scotland and Wales) has centred on whether the Prime Minister can survive the drubbing that seems to be coming Labour’s way.

We should have some idea by the weekend how things might play out. By tomorrow night, almost all of the results will be in, and it might start to become clear whether an attempt to oust Starmer is under way.

It is possible, of course, that he will decide he has had enough and announce a timetable for his own departure, which might be encouraged by a co-ordinated letter or a delegation from Labour’s back benches.

Otherwise, all eyes will be on Wes Streeting, the Health Secretary, who has the most to gain from pouncing early. He could steal a march on Andy Burnham, who is currently ineligible to stand for the leadership because he isn’t an MP, and Angela Rayner, whose campaign is not ready to go, by surging out of the traps.

There will be no shortage of Streeting supporters urging him to do so, or, at the very least, resign in the hope that others will follow and force Starmer to quit. It could be a huge week in Westminster.

Go deeper with our local elections coverage:

Unions turn on Starmer ahead of election rout

Ministers back Burnham return on eve of election bloodbath

Badenoch calls for general election if Starmer ousted

• Plus, the key local election seats to watch

 

Local Election must-reads

Nigel Farage interview: Let the Left riot over my asylum crackdown

When the results of this year’s local and devolved elections are called, Nigel Farage is likely to be the biggest winner, writes Tony Diver, our Political Editor. For his final interview of the campaign, the Reform UK leader sat down with me and was more bullish than ever. If Starmer is challenged, he should call an election, he argues. If the Prime Minister is replaced before then, who would Farage want as leader? The answer may surprise you.

This interview is available only to subscribers.
Continue reading

Tony Diver: My predictions for how divided Britain will vote

 

How runaway council tax could break the SNP’s grip on Scotland

In 2025, an almost 20-year council tax freeze ended in Scotland, opening the floodgates for local authorities to send rates soaring. Voters, who are heading to the polls in the parliamentary election today, are fed up with waiting for “long overdue” reforms. Alex Marsh explores the issue that could threaten the SNP’s tight grip on power.

Continue reading

 

From an X Factor backing singer to playing a crack-cocaine-smoking prisoner, the Green Party leader has flirted with many different roles

Polanski, the Lib Dem turncoat, hopes for yet another reinvention

When he appeared in B-movies as a drug-taking struggling artist or as a back-up choir singer in The X Factor, few could have predicted that fledgling entertainer Zack Polanski would later have ambitions to become prime minister, writes Neil Johnston. He also briefly joined the Liberal Democrats, before defecting to the Greens fewer than two years after boasting about being a member. As voters go to the polls today, the 43-year-old leader faces growing scrutiny over less trivial elements of his unusual CV, including falsely claiming to be a Red Cross spokesman and his controversial stint as a hypnotherapist.

Continue reading

 

Opinion

Allister Heath Headshot

Allister Heath

Antizionism is a totalitarian conspiracy theory rotting the West from within

The far Left has embraced a specific, modernised hate ideology with an eliminationist agenda that targets the state of Israel

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Michael Deacon</span> Headshot

Michael Deacon

It’s time to stop blaming boomers for Britain’s woes

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Isabel Oakeshott</span> Headshot

Isabel Oakeshott

Working from home has been exposed as a massive con

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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Headlines

Purported Epstein suicide note

The note was allegedly found by the disgraced financier’s cellmate

Your sport briefing

Your Essential reads

Civil servants ‘abusing flexi time’ to claim 50 days off a year

More damning claims have come to light about the state of the Civil Service after The Telegraph exposed a work-from-home scandal gripping Whitehall, writes Noah Eastwood. Whistleblowers told us that some civil servants were claiming up to 50 days’ holiday a year by “abusing flexi time”. Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg, who vowed to tackle this when in government, said our findings were “very dispiriting for hard-working people... when they see time-wasters taking advantage”.

For subscribers only

 

Annabel Fenwick Elliot has set her sights on a family move to the US

‘I’ve given up on living in Britain. Here’s why I think America is the answer’

I’ve lived in Iceland, Mauritius and Italy, writes Annabel Fenwick Elliott. Now, I’m embarking on another overseas move with my family, to the US. Trump’s America is the unrivalled land of opportunity, and laying down roots in Britain is no longer an option for me.

Continue reading

 
Spice Girls

The £2bn reason why the Spice Girls could (virtually) get back together

The Spice Girls have a dilemma: this year marks the girl group’s 30th anniversary, yet its five members can’t commit to a reunion tour. Enter the “Abba Voyage option”, to launch a money-making, long-running show that turns Posh, Baby, Sporty, Scary and Ginger into holograms. James Hall digs into the rumours swirling around a potential Spice Girls virtual extravaganza.

Continue reading

 

‘Pro-Palestine marches are supporting the killers of my boy, my son, my future,’ writes Michael Marlowe

‘Hamas killed our son on Oct 7. Now, Britain is not safe for us’

After my 24-year-old son, Jake, saw convoys patrolling British streets threatening Jewish women in 2021, he left for Israel, writes Michael Marlowe. He died a hero on Oct 7, murdered while shepherding fellow Jews to safety. Now, having been forced to witness London’s hate marches and having seen hostility against Jews run riot, I worry that we’re losing the battle against anti-Semitism that Jake recognised five years ago.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

The ultimate home workout for toned arms by summer

Personal trainer Edwina Jenner, 50, reveals the seven key exercises to strengthen, sculpt and define your arms

In an age where people are “cheating” themselves skinny with jabs, visibly toned triceps and biceps have become a must-have status symbol – a sign of effort and self-care, writes personal trainer Edwina Jenner. This 30-minute routine will have you looking and feeling stronger in weeks and can be done from the comfort of your own home.
Continue reading

 

Inexplicable

‘I saw light formations in the sky. What were they?’

Every week, Sarah Knapton, our Science Editor, and Joe Pinkstone, our Science Correspondent, demystify your supernatural experiences. From ghoulish encounters to bizarre coincidences, there’s always a scientific explanation, and nothing is as strange as it seems.

Today, our duo investigate a peculiar sighting of lights in the sky...


“It was roughly 2006. A friend and I were driving in Durham when we saw four lights in a line in the distance.

“As we continued driving, they became more obvious, to the point where we got out of the car to look. They slowly moved directly overhead in the same line and were very high up but silent.

“Over the next ten minutes, they stayed directly overhead but moved into a square shape, then back to a perfect line and then to a diamond shape. It was so odd that another driver pulled over to watch as well.

“We called Night Owls, a local radio talk show, to see if anyone else in the North East saw them, but the host tried to make us out to be one of his UFO/ghost people.

“Either way, it was a very strange sight, and due to the perfect motion of the lights, I struggle to think that they were weather balloons. Your help would be great!”

– Phil

 

 

Sarah and Joe answer:
Ah, Night Owls! For anyone unaware of Alan Robson’s late-night cult radio show on Metro Radio, it was a North East institution, in which insomniacs phoned in with a host of strange tales.

Phil’s story of strange lights, moving in formation, sounds like prime fodder for the programme, but unlike most of the eccentric callers, his account is firmly grounded in truth.

In fact, there were multiple sightings of strange lights over Durham in 2006 and the surrounding years.
Read the full answer

Plus, send in your questions for Sarah and Joe

 

Your say

Doppeldotter

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...
More often than not, surprises in food are unwelcome (excessive spice, a rogue hair), but there is at least one exception: an egg with two yolks. I defy anyone not to feel a rush of gratitude as that bonus second sun slips into the frying pan.


 

Thinking they were rare, I was struck by Sue Tester’s letter: “Each of the six large white eggs I cooked last week was a double-yolker. Is this unusual? I understand that most people choose brown eggs, but I can only say that I wish I had bought more than half a dozen of my last white batch.”


 

By Peter Roberts’s experience: “A few years ago, I bought half a dozen free-range eggs from our local butcher-cum-deli. The owner assured me they would all be double-yolkers, and they were. How could he be so sure?”


 

However, Janet Cowan dispelled some of the intrigue, writing: “Around this time of year, and into early summer, I regularly get double-yolked eggs. I purchase them from Sainsbury’s – always extra large. Delicious!”


 

Susan Edleston added: “Here in Frankfurt, at our local Friday market in Sachsenhausen, we have an excellent egg stand that sells double-yolked eggs, known in Germany as Doppeldotter. Our weekend breakfasts would not be the same without them.”


 

How, then, is all this double-yolkery possible? Ramesh Nayak offered an explanation: “If eggs are placed over a bright light in a darkened room, an experienced operator can easily see two shadows, indicating a double yolk. The procedure is called ‘candling’. Easy peasy – but time-consuming for the seller who guarantees a double-yolked egg.”

Do you have a reliable supplier of double-yolkers? 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.

 

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 FOOTBRAKE. 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.

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

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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.

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Revealed: Civil servants faking office attendance

Welsh Labour leader turns on Starmer | The health checks all over-60s should get
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Wednesday, 6 May 2026

Issue No. 437

Good morning.

Civil servants are faking their office attendance, with some absent for years on end. Insiders say managers have “no control” over the exploitation of flexible working, and critics claim that the Government is “rewarding part-time work with full-time pay”. Noah Eastwood reports.

Elsewhere, Amy Gibbons, our Political Correspondent, has interviewed the First Minister of Wales, who warns that Sir Keir Starmer could cost Labour the Senedd for the first time in its 27-year history.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Telegraph readers can now enjoy a year’s access 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

Starmer could cost us election, says Welsh Labour leader

The wave of violent teenage girls unleashed by Covid

Plus, health checks that all over-60s should get

Enjoy a whole year for £1.99 per month

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

 

Civil servants faking office attendance

Noah Eastwood

Noah Eastwood

Money Reporter

 

Civil servants avoiding the office, and the lengths they’ll go to achieve this, has become so commonplace that senior mandarins have coined a term for it: a “drive-by login”.

This phenomenon – where staff connect to their office Wi-Fi from a nearby car park before returning home – is just one of a string of examples, uncovered by a Telegraph investigation, of civil servants “taking advantage” of flexible working arrangements.

I spoke to several whistleblowers, who told me Whitehall offices were “like the Mary Celeste” on Fridays and that it was common for people “to be in for a couple of hours and disappear”, despite official guidance mandating that staff be in the office three days per week.

We also unearthed internal absence records that reveal the extent of the problem. At HMRC, for example, more than 3,000 workers have not been in an office for between six and 11 months, with 992 not attending for between one year and 23 months. There were 182 employees who did not go into work in person for two years or more. It’s a similar story at other government departments.

The findings coincide with growing concerns over public sector productivity, which has flatlined for years, and accusations of a drop in customer service levels.

One Tory MP said Labour was “rewarding part-time work with full-time pay”.

This exclusive reporting is available only to subscribers.
Continue reading

 

Opinion

Allison Pearson Headshot

Allison Pearson

We all know who is to blame for the rise in anti-Semitism – and it is not Israel

Only the Right will do what is required to lance the boil of Islamic extremism

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Ambrose Evans-Pritchard</span> Headshot

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

The Bank of England is the prisoner of a dying economic cult

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Annabel Denham</span> Headshot

Annabel Denham

The miserable reality of a plant-based society

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Tunnels have been found beneath the village of Bloxham

Your sport briefing

Your Essential Reads

The wave of violent teenage girls unleashed by Covid

A growing number of teenage girls are being arrested for serious and violent crimes. Psychologists argue that violence on social media, the encouragement of aggressive behaviour in women and the impacts of lockdown have led to an increase in antisocial activities. However, while organisations have focused on violence among boys, little is being done to support vulnerable adolescent girls.

For subscribers only

 

Seven years after his daughter’s death, Ben Goldsmith has turned to rewilding his Somerset estate – and woven her memory into family life

Ben Goldsmith: I carry the loss of my daughter with me like a treasured object

Ben Goldsmith lost his daughter, Iris, seven years ago, when she was only 15. He has created a stone circle as a touching memorial for her in the Somerset estate he is rewilding. He discusses grief, family loyalty and his love of nature with Zoe Dare-Hall.

Continue reading

 

Dr Carine Minne, 64, feels a sense of ‘deep shame’ that her profession let the public down on the Southport attack

Broadmoor psychiatrist: ‘I worried the Golders Green attack was another NHS failure’

Dr Carine Minne has worked at Broadmoor for over 30 years, treating some of the most dangerous offenders. In the wake of the Golders Green and Southport attacks, she is increasingly alarmed by how many homicides are committed by mentally disorded offenders, treated by multiple teams who fail to communicate well, and who are slipping through a system drowning in emails and bureaucracy: “We’re missing red flags because there are a gazillion other flags.”

Continue reading

 

Clem Burke (bottom right) documents the punk rock subculture from which Blondie emerged

Drink, drugs and a brawl with Debbie Harry: How Blondie blew up

★★★★★
The Other Side of the Dream
isn’t your typical rock-star autobiography, writes Poppie Platt. Clem Burke played drums for Bowie and Iggy, smoked weed with Allen Ginsberg and partied with John Belushi. When he joined Blondie, though, the fun really began. In his extraordinarily vivid new memoir, written before his death last year, he reveals how it all fell apart.

Continue reading

 

As Ukraine strikes deeper inside Russia, Putin retreats further into paranoia

A drone strike just four miles from the Kremlin this week laid bare a simple fact: Ukraine has brought the war home to Russia. With Vladimir Putin reportedly retreating into bunkers and scaling back his annual military pageant, Volodymyr Zelensky is stepping up pressure on the Kremlin to come to the negotiating table, since Russia “believes it cannot hold a parade in Moscow without Ukraine’s goodwill”.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

Tim Spector: The health checks all over-60s should get

Tim Spector having a DEXA bone scan

Tim Spector having a DEXA bone scan at St Thomas’ Hospital in London

Our columnist Tim Spector has undergone dozens of tests to learn more about his health, including those costing thousands of pounds on Harley Street. However, none of these makes his list of the 10 essential health checks for people over 60, most of which are available for free.

Continue reading

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

  • If you’re planning a garden party in the coming weeks, try these summer cocktail recipes. From sake-infused blends to sweet elderflower mixes, there’s something for every guest.
 

Lisa Armstrong’s makeovers

Do you have a fashion dilemma for Lisa? Send us your problems here and we’ll do our best to answer them in a future edition of this newsletter. Also, you can sign up to the Fashion and Beauty newsletter here.

 

Your say

King of the grill

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...
The British barbecue is always a rather fraught prospect. It takes all the usual hazards of eating outdoors – uncomfortable seating, stiff winds, the prospect of sharing your meal with insects – and ups the ante by insisting that the cooking become part of the whole performance.

Then you risk incurring the wrath of the neighbours (if you forgot to invite them) by invading their patch with drifts of smoke. For anyone willing to brave all of the above, I hope you found our guide to hosting a barbecue in a typical British summer useful.

It’s an art many people, including myself, struggle to master. Our Atlantic and Antipodean cousins are bolder, with the grills and the meat festivals to prove it.


 

Dalton Knox said: “I brought back a portable BBQ from Canada in ’71. It improved picnics greatly. Generally, enough wine took care of issues like rain.”


 

Phillip Ullah concurred: “Having learnt how to barbecue while living in Australia, I never cease to be dismayed by how clueless we are in Britain. Most people never think of closing the lid (if they have one), resulting in that British classic – the burnt raw sausage.”


 

It was generally agreed that the lid was the crucial thing. “Just put a decent-sized lump of meat in a BBQ with a lid, placing the meat on a tray,” advised one reader. “A leg of lamb works well, especially when marinated in a tandoori marinade.”


 

Meanwhile, Tyler Roberts seemed to qualify for the post of gourmet griller-in-chief: “I have cooked chateaubriand on the barbecue, by searing the meat and then resting on a bed of veg. Then, I use the veg for a rich sauce along with some red wine, stock and berries.”


 

The resourcefulness didn’t end there. “I fire up the barbecue for a joint every Christmas Day,” said Chris Riding. “Frees up the oven for other things.”

Is there a king of the grill in your household? 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.

 

The morning quiz

A car ended up in the pub’s beer garden after clearing the adjacent creek

In the Hampshire village of Sopley, a car flew over a bridge and crashed into the beer garden of The Woolpack. However, this is not the first occasion such an incident has taken place. How many times has this happened before?

 

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 HOMEBUYER. 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.

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

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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.

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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.