Traveling

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Epstein’s secret files

This diet could slash your cholesterol by a third | The solar ‘land grab’ in Miliband’s own backyard
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Monday, 23 February 2026

Issue No. 365

Good morning.

Unseen files hidden by Jeffrey Epstein may still exist, The Telegraph can reveal.

Documents discovered by our reporters show that the paedophile paid to move material into secret storage lockers, in an apparent attempt to evade investigation. Search warrants suggest that these were never raided. This raises the possibility that they still contain unseen evidence relating to Epstein and his associates, including Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and Lord Mandelson.

We have the full story below. It’s an excellent piece of reporting, available only to subscribers.

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

The diet that could slash your cholesterol by a third in one month

The solar ‘land grab’ in Miliband’s own backyard

Plus, ‘I struggle to recognise my own child’: The astonishing toll of face blindness

Free thinking. Straight talking.

Explore more opinion from the nation’s leading comment writers.

One year for £25.

 

Epstein hid secret files in storage units across US

A public storage unit in Delray Beach, Florida, used by Jeffrey Epstein

Poppy Wood, Neil Johnston and Hayley Dixon

 

Did Jeffrey Epstein blackmail his high-flying friends? The question has been circulating since details of the paedophile’s suspected sex-trafficking ring emerged more than two decades ago.

The FBI insisted in a statement last year that it found no evidence that Epstein was producing kompromat on his famous associates.

However, earlier this month The Telegraph revealed that Epstein had ordered his staff to install covert cameras in his property in Palm Beach.

Now, we can disclose that Epstein also paid private detectives to remove personal computers and photos to be stored in a secret storage locker.

Epstein kept fastidious records. CDs and other material were found in his Palm Beach locker

The Telegraph has found evidence that Epstein rented at least six self-storage lock-ups, with the leases spanning a 16-year period, up to his death in 2019.

It includes one in Palm Beach, where he paid the Riley Kiraly detective agency to store computers that they had removed from his home before a police search.

Detectives have long suspected that the billionaire was tipped off ahead of the first raid on his Florida property in 2005, with one police chief saying the house seemed “cleaned up”.

The revelations around the secret storage lockers may provide answers to that puzzle.

Manhattan Mini Storage advert

Manhattan Mini Storage appears not to have known it was being used by Epstein. In 2022, the company launched an advertising campaign mocking the former prince

The Telegraph has found no evidence that the FBI ever searched these storage units, and the intelligence agency declined to comment.

It raises the possibility that kompromat may indeed exist after all — but could have remained undiscovered by authorities all this time.
Read the full story


How Epstein used London’s reputation-laundering industry to cover up his crimes

Plus,
Police reopen investigation into Epstein flights but evidence ‘has been destroyed’

 

Huge upset as British star beats Chalamet and DiCaprio to best actor

Robert Aramayo won the Bafta awards for Leading Actor and Rising Star

Robbie Collin

Robbie Collin

Chief Film Critic

 

There has been much grumbling of late that the Bafta Film Awards have trapped themselves between two stools. Should they rally behind Britain’s film industry, like France’s Césars or Spain’s Goyas, or try to second-guess the Oscars in a grab for international relevance? Well, on Sunday evening at London’s Royal Festival Hall, voters sent a decisive message with this year’s selection of winners: erm, can you give us another year or so to figure it out?

Yes, Best Film, the biggest honour, went to the very American satirical thriller One Battle After Another, which stars Leonardo DiCaprio and was written and directed by the Californian-to-his-bones Paul Thomas Anderson.

Yes, One Battle was also the overall champion, with five further wins down the running order: Best Director for Paul Thomas Anderson (long overdue), Best Supporting Actor for Sean Penn (over the considerably more fashionable likes of Jacob Elordi and Paul Mescal), Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Cinematography and Best Editing.

Prince William and Princess Catherine arriving at the Baftas

Prince William and Princess Catherine arriving at the Baftas

But, but, but: if you squinted, the remainder of the ceremony almost looked patriotic. The Best Actor race furnished us with the most dazzling case in point, after the French-American frontrunner, Timothée Chalamet, was unexpectedly bested by Hull’s own Robert Aramayo – who, minutes earlier, had also won in the Rising Star category, voted for by the general public.
Read Robbie’s full run-down of the evening here

Bethan Holt: The Prince and Princess of Wales’s couple dressing reminds us of Royals at their glamorous best

 

Opinion

Tim Stanley Headshot

Tim Stanley

My message to young people on the Right: do not join Rupert Lowe’s destructive vanity project

Politics is the art of the possible. Restore Britain is a distraction

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Ed Husain</span> Headshot

Ed Husain

It’s time to take Trump’s Gaza plan seriously

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Rowan Pelling</span> Headshot

Rowan Pelling

Don’t judge Churchill too harshly if he did sanction pornography

Continue reading

 

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In other news

King’s Hall Methodist Church in Southall was damaged in the fire, which started yesterday evening

Your sport briefing

Your essential reads

‘He won’t be our MP again’: The solar ‘land grab’ in Miliband’s own backyard

Hooton Pagnell is expected to lose 232 acres of top-quality farmland with solar panels

In Ed Miliband’s Doncaster North constituency, an aggressive green energy “land grab” threatens to bury 500-acre family farms and historic villages under tens of thousands of solar panels, writes Jonathan Leake, our Energy Editor. As the Energy Secretary pushes his net-zero agenda, furious locals are fighting the destruction of their countryside and driving a rural surge towards Reform UK.

Continue reading

 

Roy Ridley and his partner Sandra pictured during a trip to Dartmoor

‘Since my wife died, I’ve lost all my friends’

I met my wife, Sandra, in an east-London curry house in 1977, writes Roy Ridley. For decades, we loved hosting dinner parties. However, when she died suddenly at 56, the invitations dried up. I realised our old friends were simply “takers”, leaving me so isolated I spent Christmas Eve hiding under my duvet. After I also lost Robert, my 44-year-old son, I knew I had to forge a new path to survive the loneliness.

For subscribers only

 

Fay Bound-Alberti’s rare condition means she relies on scent and body language to identify even close family and friends

‘I struggle to recognise my own child’: The astonishing toll of face blindness

The average person can recognise about 5,000 faces, but I was born with the rare condition of “face blindness”, writes Fay Bound-Alberti. Many of us may feel we’re “bad with faces”, but for me, it is a daily battle to identify not just acquaintances but even close family and friends. Instead, I have to take cues from a person’s body language, scent and even outfits. However, the question, to me, is not why some people can’t recognise faces, but why have we decided that this is the most important way to know someone?

Continue reading

 

The proposed Strait of Messina Bridge would connect Sicily with mainland Italy and become the world’s longest single-span bridge

Meloni’s €13.5bn bet that will make or break Italy

Italy’s conservative government, led by Giorgia Meloni, hopes that building what would be the world’s longest suspension bridge to link the Italian mainland to Sicily at a cost of £11.8bn will help develop the country’s impoverished, dysfunctional south. The huge investment is a major test of Meloni’s leadership, writes Nick Squires, Rome Correspondent. It could turn out to be a transformational endeavour or an unpopular albatross – her very own HS2.

Continue reading

 

Joan Burstein’s Studio 54 days may be behind her, but her 100th birthday will not be a quiet affair

Britain’s most stylish 100-year-old: Everyone’s scared to take risks these days

“Wear memories, that’s my motto,” says Joan Burstein, the queen – or should that be empress? – of much-loved fashion retailer Browns, writes Lisa Armstrong, Head of Fashion. Mrs B, as she’s affectionately known, celebrated her 100th birthday this weekend in Ibiza. I sat down with her before her celebrations to talk about her life and style. “Never try to be anything you’re not is my advice for anyone, especially as you get older.”

Continue reading

 
Cartoon of a goose

‘Canada Goose said the clothes smelled of hairspray and refused a refund – but I’m bald’

Our reader bought some clothes from Canada Goose, tried them on once, and returned them immediately as they were too big, writes Ruth Emery, our consumer champion. The retailer rejected the return, claiming the items “smelt of hairspray” and had hair on them. There’s just one problem: our reader is bald. So, I investigated his wild goose chase for a refund.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

The diet that could slash your cholesterol by a third in one month

While statins are the preferred choice for reducing “bad” cholesterol, diet and lifestyle changes remain vital. Beyond avoiding pastries, pies and sweet treats, the scientifically proven “Portfolio” diet focuses on what you can add to your plate. Doctors have found this plan can lower cholesterol in only weeks. Here’s how it works.

Continue reading

Below are two more articles that I hope will improve your day:

 

Caption competition with...

Matt Cartoon
Matt Pritchett

Matt Pritchett

Cartoonist

 

Hello,

This week you have a breaking news bulletin to caption.

Congratulations to Richard Layton on his romantic caption below. Anyone receiving such a card would surely be flattered.

Matt Cartoon

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

Bringing home the bacon

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...
Recently, a strange craving came over me. I longed for a bacon butty – a perfectly normal desire, you might think, but, in this case, I hankered after streaky rashers. Like Silvana Franco, I’d normally insist on middle or back bacon, but I fancied a change. I won’t be repeating the mistake.


 

Nonetheless, I was glad to find that I’m not alone in daring to experiment. Steve McConnell wrote: “I appreciate that this is heresy, but I like fried smoked bacon, which can be supermarket value brand, served in a couple of gently microwaved pittas, with a generous dollop of chilli sauce.” Thank you, Steve – it takes courage to admit that.


 

Douglas Brown’s claim was no less bold: “The killer condiment in a bacon sandwich is mango chutney. Take my word for it. It’s alchemy.”


 

The more conservative connoisseurs also made themselves heard: “I’m sorry,” Harry Finley wrote, “but mustard in a bacon butty sounds like a crime to me. Fine in a sausage sandwich, but not with bacon.”


 

Yes, on balance I agree with that. I was impressed by Andrew Shaw’s blend of innovation and tradition: “I love my butty with fried mushrooms, no sauce. Occasionally, I make it the old-fashioned way, like my mum and nana did. That’s using lard to cook the bacon, before soaking the fat into the bread, rather than having butter. The bread must be white. It’s a murderous occasional treat.” Well, that’s tonight’s dinner sorted.

How do you take your bacon butty? Send your responses here and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of From the Editor PM, to which you can sign up here.

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 PlusWord, Sorted, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was MULTITUDE. 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 here.

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

Chris Evans, Editor

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.

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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.

England’s Six Nations campaign is in tatters

‘My sister Ghislaine is Epstein’s scapegoat’ | 50 great podcasts you’ve probably never heard of
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Sunday, 22 February 2026

Issue No. 364

Good morning.

English rugby is in a state of shock after Steve Borthwick’s side were blown away by Ireland yesterday. England were expected to respond emphatically to a disappointing defeat against Scotland last weekend but instead produced an even worse performance, raising questions about the side’s direction. Our rugby team reports from Allianz Stadium, Twickenham.

Elsewhere, the spotlight remains on Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor after our reporters revealed that police had been asked to investigate whether the former prince used taxpayer-funded jets and RAF bases to meet Jeffrey Epstein. Sympathy for Mr Mountbatten-Windsor has been in short supply this week, but Judith Woods has found a rare advocate – Ian Maxwell, the brother of Ghislaine Maxwell. Read the remarkable interview below.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph 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

Matt Goodwin: ‘I had a swastika put on my door for having Right-wing views’

‘I was a Hargreaves Lansdown customer for 20 years – this is why I’m finally leaving’

Plus, 50 great podcasts you’ve probably never heard of

Proud to be British.

Read more from journalists who champion our culture, history and values.

One year for £25.

 

Six Nations recap

Jamie Osborne grabs Ireland’s fifth try at Twickenham

 

England’s Six Nations campaign went from bad to worse after an utter capitulation at home against Ireland, in which they conceded 41 points and fans walked out well before full-time.

Steve Borthwick’s team were expected to compete for their first title in six years but that hope is already dashed after two defeats in their first three matches, with a trip to Paris still to come. The concerning manner of the losses means that the current regime, which seemed to have turned a corner during a successful 2025, is in danger of unravelling, as Oliver Brown writes.

England’s performance was one of their worst ever at Twickenham, and we have dissected 12 reasons why that was the case. It was so bad, in fact, that vice-captain Ellis Genge apologised to fans for the team “believing their own hype” following their resounding win against Wales in round one.

England skipper Maro Itoje’s performance was not worthy of his milestone 100th cap

Both Luke Cowan-Dickie and Freddie Steward were handed the humiliation of being hooked before half-time, and they do not come out favourably in Daniel Schofield’s England player ratings.

World Cup winner Will Greenwood is calling for mass changes for England’s next match against Italy, including dropping fly-half George Ford. If that does not happen, England could lose to the Azzurri for the first time in their history.

Elsewhere, Wales came close to ending their miserable run of defeats but Scotland managed to snatch victory at the very end. The match turned on a moment of genius from Finn Russell, who caught the Welsh team napping with a clever restart that Darcy Graham latched on to.
Read the full match report here

Oliver Brown: Steve Borthwick’s England tenure is in danger of unravelling

Twelve things that made this one of England’s worst performances

Daniel Schofield’s player ratings: Ignominy for Steward and Cowan-Dickie

Ellis Genge apologises to England fans

Will Greenwood: England must make changes and that starts with dropping George Ford

 

Andrew may have used RAF jets to meet Epstein, Brown tells police

Gordon Brown has demanded a police investigation into whether Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor chartered taxpayer-funded jets and landed at RAF bases to meet up with Jeffrey Epstein.

The former prime minister has written to six police forces, suggesting that civil servants be questioned about Mr Mountbatten-Windsor’s time as a trade envoy, it can be revealed.

The letters show his deep concern that Mr Mountbatten-Windsor used chartered RAF flights to transport him to personal engagements that could have involved Epstein, and that the former prince might have leaked confidential information from the trips in a “wholly unacceptable” use of public money.
Continue reading

After revelations this week, sympathy for those caught up in the Epstein scandal is in short supply. Even so, Judith Woods has found one rare advocate in Ian Maxwell, who maintains that his sister, Ghislaine, has become the “fall guy” for Epstein’s crimes and would not be in prison if the paedophile were still alive.

Judith Woods

Judith Woods

Features Writer

 

When Ghislaine Maxwell was convicted of child sex trafficking and other offences in 2022 by a New York court, her 20-year sentence had a throw-away-the-key air about it.

Even so, her family refuse to accept her guilt and have been supporting her as she mounts an appeal on the grounds that her trial was unfair. At the forefront is her elder brother, Ian, who has become her de facto spokesman.

Energetic and impassioned, he came into The Telegraph’s offices to appear on The Daily T podcast and then sat down with me to explain why he believed his sister was set up in the wake of Jeffrey Epstein’s death.

Ian Maxwell photographed in London for The Telegraph this week

“My sister is the fall guy,” he said. “Somebody had to pay the price for what Epstein did and so the government and the media chose her. I genuinely believe that, if Epstein were alive, he would be incarcerated and she would be free.”

He also talked about what it was like growing up in the shadow of Robert Maxwell, his father and a legendary newspaper baron. Beatings were regular, while his parents made their favouritism for his sister clear.

“If you got a bad report from school he would beat us boys with a belt,” recalls Mr Maxwell. “The girls had it a little easier; he would use a hairbrush on them. Even though Ghislaine was the golden girl, she wasn’t spared.”

Robert Maxwell with Ian and Ghislaine in 1990

He also expressed sympathy for Mr Mountbatten-Windsor, who was arrested this week for crimes relating to his friendship with Epstein, namely misconduct in public office. The sight of the eighth in line to the throne, supine and dazed in the back of a car was a reminder of the fact that, unlike Ghislaine Maxwell, his family have abandoned him to his fate.

“There he is, kicked out of his home, completely isolated, and he doesn’t even have a supportive family; even his daughters are at sixes and sevens about what to do.”
Continue reading

Read more: Andrew’s Met protection officers ‘told to guard party hosted by Epstein’

 

Opinion

Zoe Strimpel Headshot

Zoe Strimpel

I went to California to cheat death... but ended up just feeling queasy about lazy Britons

In buzzing, high-productivity LA, biohacking is becoming mainstream – and the contrast with the stagnant UK couldn’t be starker

Continue reading

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

Kemi Badenoch

Young people have been stitched up by Blair’s university con

Continue reading

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

Jake Wallis Simons

The case for Trump attacking Iran

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Weekend reads

Matt Goodwin

Matt Goodwin: ‘I had a swastika put on my door for having Right-wing views’

Matt Goodwin is pinning his hopes on becoming Reform UK’s ninth MP at the Gorton and Denton by-election next week. Before the vote, Natasha Leake caught up with him in the constituency, where he plans to help bring down Sir Keir Starmer’s Government. In a wide-ranging interview, Goodwin discussed, among other things, how the term “far Right” is no longer used to describe “being a member of a neo-Nazi group”, but instead refers to working full-time, paying your taxes and loving your country.

Continue reading

 

How internet-speak is changing the English language – for the worse

Have you noticed certain changes in the voices of teenagers these days? Statements that sound like questions, a grating vocal fry and Jabberwocky-esque phrases are all changing the face of our linguistic landscape. Unsurprisingly, social media is to blame – and, in a quest for algorithmic supremacy, these annoying vocal tics are just the tip of the iceberg.

Continue reading

 

Prue Leith reveals her secret to ‘loving’ old age

For nine years, Dame Prue Leith brought joy to the nation’s televisions in her colourful specs and patterned clothing as a judge on Channel 4’s The Great British Bake Off. From her support of assisted dying to her campaign for cookery to be taught in schools as a way to tackle the obesity crisis, Dame Prue shares what her life looks like beyond the Bake Off tent.

Continue reading

 

50 great podcasts you’ve probably never heard of

Apparently, there are over four-and-a-half million podcasts worldwide. There is clearly something for every taste, and yet the choice is overwhelming and so we often rely on the high-profile ones. With this in mind, Chris Bennion has come up with 50 lesser-known podcasts, covering a diverse range of topics from history to true crime to eccentric oddities. This definitive list is full of unique recommendations you can pass on to friends. It is available to subscribers only, so click through and sign up to read it.

Continue reading

 

‘I was a Hargreaves Lansdown customer for 20 years – this is why I’m finally leaving’

“A dinosaur resting on its laurels” was how Hugo Ward described Hargreaves Lansdown after it changed its fees last month. He is one of many fed-up investors who got in touch with The Telegraph to say they were moving their money out of Britain’s biggest stockbroker, after the fees overhaul made thousands worse off.

Continue reading

 

Your Sunday

The 15 best holiday destinations for March sun

Jamaica sits comfortably over 30C during March

After one of the wettest winters in years, many of us will be planning for a break in the sun at the earliest opportunity. In much of Europe, March remains a touch too chilly for a beach getaway, but the options are plentiful if you are willing to look just a little further afield.

Continue reading

Below is an article that I hope will be a help this weekend:

  • As we endure another cold and wet snap, you may be wondering whether your car has what it takes to deal with harsh wintry conditions. These are the best 4x4 cars that aren’t SUVs.
 

Inexplicable

Did a saucerful of bright lights prove alien life over London?

Members of the Aetherius Society, set up in the belief that UFOs are real, commune with ‘otherworldly beings’

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.

A baffled reader writes...
“Can you confirm an incident in London in the Sixties when I was a child? My older brother, who at the time was a sceptic, maintains he saw a UFO over Maida Vale, where he worked.

“Residents were awed when they saw an object in the sky hovering, then accelerating, then stopping and moving in another direction.

“I think it was reported in the Evening Standard or another London newspaper at the time.

“My brother was so annoyed that he hadn’t got his camera with him, as he was a keen plane spotter already and ensured he always had his camera with him thereafter.”

 

 

Sarah and Joe answer:
In the wake of Barack Obama’s comments that aliens are “real”, we asked Telegraph readers if they had ever had an extraterrestrial encounter of their own.

They did not disappoint.

Richard Gayfer described how, when picking apples in his garden at the age of 17, he saw a “sort of silvery white” round disc, which moved rapidly across the sky “far quicker than an aeroplane”.

Lauren Olsen also had a similar experience around 60 years ago. “I noticed what I presumed was an aircraft travelling in a northerly direction,” she said.

“While watching this, I noticed it had seemed to have stopped for a few seconds, then moved 90 degrees to the east, sat for a few seconds and again proceeded to the north. A minute or so later, it disappeared.”

However, it was the strange lights over Maida Vale, in west London, that intrigued us, because it had a definitive location where we could start hunting.
Read the full answer here

Plus, send in your questions for Sarah and Joe here

 

One great life

Charles Richards, Chindit who left a vivid account of jungle warfare behind enemy lines in Burma

Charles Richards in the khaki hat worn in Burma by the Long Range Penetration Force, ‘the Chindits’

Charles Richards, who has died aged 104, is thought to have been the last-but-one of the surviving Chindits, the Long Range Penetration Force sent behind enemy lines in the Burma jungle during the Second World War, writes Andrew M Brown, Obituaries Editor.

In his seventies, Charlie Richards put together a memoir recalling his day-to-day experiences of the fierce covert battle against the Japanese.

Richards had a vivid recollection of the men’s terror of the hidden enemy, who would call out “Johnny, where are you?” to try to frighten the British into giving away their positions.

Then there was the reliance on mules, which were transported in Dakota troop-carrier planes, secured by bamboo fixings. Used because they could navigate the dense and steep terrain where Jeeps could not, mules were lively animals: one kicked a hole in the side of a plane.

Richards (lying down, front, second left) before flying to Burma in a Dakota transport plane

Richards (lying down, front, second left) before flying to Burma in a Dakota transport plane

The monsoon brought with it dysentery, typhus, malaria, ticks and leeches and almost every evening there were bodies to bury.

Some men had such bad dysentery that they threw away their trousers and wore “kilts” made of their blankets.
Read the gripping obituary here

 

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 CREDULITY. 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 here.

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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.