Traveling

Sunday, July 12, 2026

Widdecombe suspect’s 300-mile drive with wooden pole

GPs go part-time as doctors lose faith in the NHS | Quiz: Should you give your children their inheritance now?
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Monday, 13 July 2026

Issue No. 505

Good morning.

The man suspected of murdering Ann Widdecombe is believed to have driven nearly 300 miles to her Dartmoor home with a wooden pole on the morning of her death, The Telegraph can disclose. Richard Holmes has the story.

Elsewhere, it’s been another huge weekend of sport. Jason Burt analyses the Thomas Tuchel-Jude Bellingham relationship after it was thrust back into the spotlight and Simon Briggs wraps up another Wimbledon. Michael Vaughan shares his thoughts on Brendon McCullum’s sacking and who he thinks should take over as England’s Test cricket coach.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. As a valued reader, we’re giving you exclusive early access to our Summer Sale. Join us today and try one year of The Telegraph for just £19. If you’re already a subscriber make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

GPs go part-time as doctors lose faith in the NHS

In a tiny Utah courtroom, Maga is more divided than ever

Plus, should you give your children their inheritance now? Take our quiz

Get early access to our Summer Sale

One year of free-thinking journalism, puzzles and more – all for just £19.

 

Widdecombe suspect drove nearly 300 miles to her home ‘with wooden pole’

Police outside the property in Rotherham, South Yorkshire, where the murder suspect was arrested

Richard Holmes

Forensic Investigations Editor

 

On the morning of Ann Widdecombe’s death, the man suspected of murdering her is believed to have packed a wooden pole into his car and driven nearly 300 miles to her home in Haytor, Devon.

Devon and Cornwall Police have arrested a 28-year-old from Rotherham and indicated that they are not looking for anyone else. They stressed that there was no suggestion that the alleged murder was politically motivated.

For those living near the suspect, however, the developments have done little to ease the shock. They say the suspect put “some kind of wooden pole” into a car before driving off on the morning of Widdecombe’s death, and CCTV footage adds weight to their claims.

Tributes left for Ann Widdecombe

On the morning she was killed, while she spoke to the media, the suspect was already making the lengthy journey towards her home.

This report is available only to subscribers.
Continue reading

‘A legend in our lifetime’: Village pays tribute to Widdecombe

 

Opinion

Annabel Denham Headshot

Annabel Denham

The Right must brace itself for a Burnham boost

There is no reason to believe that our next prime minister will collapse as dramatically as the last

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Matthew Lynn</span> Headshot

Matthew Lynn

Volkswagen is on the road to ruin

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Jane Shilling</span> Headshot

Jane Shilling

The Bayeux Tapestry is pure joy, not a cure for national neuroses

Continue reading

 

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Headlines

summer of sport

Bellingham’s tiff with Tuchel unpicked, the next England Test coach and Sinner’s comeback

Jude Bellingham has shown that he is not the problem for England, he is the solution

Jason Burt

Jason Burt

Chief Football Correspondent

 

Ever since Thomas Tuchel’s remark that his mother found some of Jude Bellingham’s on-field behaviour repulsive, there has been an understandable fascination about their relationship.

Especially when Tuchel did not automatically pick Bellingham and suggested he had work to do to get back into the England team.

There were undoubtedly issues and the pair do not have to be friends, although they get on far better than has been suggested, and not least after a meeting in Madrid in May, revealed by Telegraph Sport. It did not exactly clear-the-air, but it helped.

Now, Bellingham has rejected Tuchel’s criticisms following the hard-fought World Cup quarter-final win over Norway. Anyone who knows anything about him, or Tuchel, will not be surprised. That creative tension, that edge, might just make the difference for England.
Continue reading

Michael Vaughan

Michael Vaughan

 

Only Andy Flower can give England’s Test cricket the credibility that was lacking during the past couple of years of Brendon McCullum’s reign.

Close at the start, the bond between Brendon McCullum and Ben Stokes loosened as time went on

The team needs a head coach who knows how to win and bring through young players. Flower took England to No 1 in the world and won Ashes series home and away. Since then he has become one of the world’s most successful franchise coaches. He ticks every box. Time for a serious figure to take on Australia next year.
Continue reading

Simon Briggs

Simon Briggs

Tennis Correspondent

 

At Wimbledon, Jannik Sinner, the defending champion, overcame Alexander Zverev in a men’s final that achieved a high level of technical excellence but lacked narrative intrigue.

Sinner kisses his trophy after winning back-to-back Wimbledon titles

The problem – for the first two sets at least – lay in the dominance of the two service games, which felt like a throwback to the era of Pete Sampras and Goran Ivanisevic. Eventually, after almost three hours of aces and missed returns, Sinner cracked the code by achieving the first break of serve in the 34th game. That was the spur for his eventual 6-7, 7-6, 6-3, 6-4 comeback victory in three exhausting hours and 46 minutes.
Read the full report here

Jeremy Wilson: Sinner deserved the glory, but contest lacked spark

 

Essential Reads

GPs go part-time as doctors lose faith in the NHS

Britain’s GP crisis is often framed as a shortage of doctors, but the reality is far more complicated, writes Szu Ping Chan, our Economics Editor. Crushed by relentless workloads, many doctors are cutting their hours or leaving the NHS altogether, while others are tempted abroad by better pay and a healthier work-life balance. While patients struggle to get an appointment, Britain’s family doctors are walking away.

For subscribers only

 

At 76, violinist André Rieu is showing no signs of slowing down and is planning a run of arenas in Britain next year

André Rieu: ‘A Puerto Rican fan paid scammers £35k to renovate my castle’

The Dutch violinist and conductor packs out stadiums, has sold more than 40 million records and even had the honour of a TV channel being named after him. Yet, this maestro with a penchant for fairy tale castles and cascading fireworks is consistently trampled on by the world’s classical music community. Here, he tells Guy Kelly about his miserable childhood, the fans who fall for his AI alias and how he responds to those pesky critics.

Continue reading

 

Tyler Robinson, who has not yet entered a plea over Charlie Kirk’s killing, during a court hearing in December

In a tiny Utah courtroom, Maga is more divided than ever

Poppy Wood, our US Correspondent, reports from the courtroom hearing into Tyler Robinson’s alleged killing of Charlie Kirk. There, she finds a growing rift within America’s conservative movement, as conspiracy theories surrounding the assassination collide with the grief of Kirk’s family and demands for justice.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

Should you give your children their inheritance now? Take our quiz

As Labour tightens its grip on what you can pass on to your children, many are planning to hand over inheritance before the taxman gets it. Beware giving away too much too soon: you could find yourself in a difficult situation later. Our quiz will help you work out whether you can afford to hand down your wealth to your children now.

Continue reading

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

  • Whether it’s a Lincolnshire or Cumberland, sausages are a staple for many. Some types, however, should be avoided. Here’s what to look out for.
 

CAPTION COMPETITION WITH...

Matt Cartoon
Matt Pritchett

Matt Pritchett

Cartoonist

 

Hello! For this week’s caption competition, you have two men facing an incoming attack by Vikings. Keep your entries coming!
Send me your captions here

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

Remembering Patricia Greene

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...
Over the last few days we have received plenty of tributes to Patricia Greene, who notched up an astonishing 68 years on The Archers. There is something about the intimacy of radio that led many readers to think of Jill Archer as one might an old friend. Thanks to the character’s longevity, her fans were spread across the generations.


 

“My mum was a lifelong listener of The Archers and always identified with Jill, family lynchpin and baker extraordinaire,” said Ali North. “I hope they’re together now, enjoying a slice of strawberry shortcake and pouring a cup of coffee, while indulging in delicious gossip about Ambridge folk.”


 

Another reader concurred: “In 1951, my Grannie T asked me to sit with her and listen to the wireless. My first taste of The Archers. Thanks to British Forces Broadcasting Service I was able to listen to the programme all over the world: from Belize (British Honduras) in the west to Hong Kong in the east. When I was posted to London, I used to leave my local pub in time to listen – I was always ‘played out’ by the regulars humming The Archers theme tune.”


 

It certainly seems that her voice travelled far and wide. “The Archers, like most organisations blessed with such a linchpin, evolved around her constant, stable, presence,” wrote Andrew Banks. “A lovely BBC producer even sent me cassette tapes of episodes whilst I was deployed to the far north of Norway.”


 

I leave it to Anne Thrope to sum up: “Thank you Patricia for bringing Jill to life. Sometimes a little terse but generally good-hearted, loving, and supportive of all her family.”

That’s all for today. In the meantime, you can contact the Letters Editor here.

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

1985 | Live Aid concerts are held at both Wembley and JFK Stadium

2016 | Theresa May is elected as leader of the Conservative Party and appointed prime minister

2018 | Donald Trump meets Queen Elizabeth II at Windsor Castle

2024 | On the same day six years later, Trump survives an assassination attempt at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania (see the front page from the following day below, and how we had to switch from our first edition to the second edition as the news came through late in the evening)

Birthdays: Lamine Yamal (19), Harrison Ford (84), Sir Patrick Stewart (86)

Telegraph front pages

Plus, in the news today, Conor McGregor’s UFC comeback was short-lived. How many seconds did it take for an injury to end the fight?

Conor McGregor said he had no injuries coming into the contest with Max Holloway

1. 72 seconds
2. 95 seconds
3. 37 seconds
4. 69 seconds

Click one of the options to reveal the answer...

 

Puzzles

The Telegraph has released a range of bite-sized puzzles perfect for a two-minute mental workout on the go. To celebrate, we will bring you a different one each day this week, starting with today’s Mini Crossword.

Panagram will return at the end of this run, but you can still find it here, yesterday’s Panagram was ENTANGLED.

 

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

Get early access to our Summer Sale

One year of free-thinking journalism, puzzles and more – all for just £19.

 

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Saturday, July 11, 2026

England get away with it

My week in the eye of the Harry and Meghan storm | The summer health mistakes to avoid
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Sunday, 12 July 2026

Issue No. 504

Good morning.

And breathe. Two goals from Jude Bellingham – and perhaps a teeny bit of help from Spidercam – have sent England through to a World Cup semi-final. Oliver Brown reports from Miami on an agonisingly tense game and another astonishing Bellingham performance. Now bring on Lionel Messi and Argentina.

Plus, police last night arrested a man on suspicion of murdering Ann Widdecombe. The 28-year-old, who is a white British national, was held in South Yorkshire. We have the latest developments.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

P.S. As a valued reader, we’re giving you exclusive early access to our Summer Sale. Join us today and try one year of The Telegraph for just £19. If you’re already a subscriber make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

My week in the eye of the Harry and Meghan storm

He lost his son in Gaza, now he’s coming for Netanyahu

Plus, the summer health mistakes to avoid

Get early access to our Summer Sale

One year of free-thinking journalism, puzzles and more – all for just £19.

 

Summer of sport

Remorseless Tuchel is driving England to greatness

Jude Bellingham was England’s talismanic hero – again

Oliver Brown

Oliver Brown

Chief Sports Writer, at Hard Rock Stadium, Miami

 

“Hey Jude” was the only refrain you could hear as exhausted, elated England fans streamed out into the Miami night. And with good reason, after another astonishing display by Jude Bellingham broke Norway’s resistance and launched his team into only a fourth semi-final in the nation’s World Cup history.

In a match of agonising tension, Bellingham emerged once more as the talisman, scoring two nerveless goals, despite the broiling Florida humidity, to leave his country just one match from a first World Cup final since 1966. To reach it, they will need to overcome Lionel Messi’s Argentina, the defending champions, in Atlanta on Wednesday. You could scarcely ask for a duel more tantalising.

Tuchel was not happy with England’s performance

It is already a huge achievement by England to come this far, with Thomas Tuchel remorseless in his ambition to put a second star on the shirt. The more the manager galvanises these players, the more you wonder whether he might just satisfy a yearning that has been building for 60 years. For while he was euphoric at the result, Tuchel was far from thrilled with the performance, claiming that it lacked speed or discipline or technical quality. Brutal? Perhaps. But how refreshing that standards are being set so high, and that platitudes are giving way to brutal honesty.

Bellingham seemed peeved by Tuchel’s verdict. “Whatever,” he shrugged, when the remarks were put to him afterwards. But regardless of the strains in their relationship, both men have shown themselves at this tournament to be truly world-class. England will need to improve again if they are to find a way past a streetwise Argentina and the luminous brilliance of Messi. It will be, in every sense, the game of their lives.

Tuchel hits out at ‘lucky’ England

Bellingham the magician sends England to another World Cup semi-final

Watch: Norway fury as ball ‘hits Spidercam’ before England goal

. . . and it’s Argentina next after Alvarez’s stunning winner

 

What a turbo-charged Burnham mansion tax could mean for your home

Benedict J Smith

Benedict J Smith

Money Writer

 

When Rachel Reeves, the Chancellor, announced a “mansion tax” on £2m homes in her November Budget, many predicted that, sooner or later, the goalposts would move.

Now Andy Burnham, who has previously described property as an undertaxed asset, is reportedly preparing to take a bigger slice of Britain’s £7tn housing wealth.

Analysis by The Telegraph reveals that reducing the threshold for the surcharge on high-value homes to £1.5m would bring an estimated 271,000 properties in England into scope.

This would mean a levy originally aimed at the super-wealthy would increasingly hit owners of relatively modest homes, without ostensibly breaking Labour’s manifesto pledge not to increase taxes on working people.
This article is for subscribers only.

Continue reading

 

Opinion

Daniel Hannan Headshot

Daniel Hannan

Count Binface is no laughing matter. He embodies why Britain is in such a mess

The novelty candidate is a symptom of a much deeper malaise: we don’t want to live within our means

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

Janet Daley

Britain’s mad lockdown experiment has damaged a generation of young people

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

Michael Deacon

Here’s the real reason why Labour’s never had a female leader – but no one wants to admit it

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Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Weekend reads

The King and Queen seemed to take delight in the animals they encountered at London Zoo on Thursday

The week the Royal family avoided the ‘Sussex circus’

While the Duke of Sussex kicked off his trip to Britain in a flurry of headlines, the Royal family had a conspicuously busy week, writes Hannah Furness, our Royal Editor.

The King literally put on a helmet and Prince William went to Hastings (where Harold, lest we forget, took one in the eye in 1066). The Princess of Wales got a new penpal, Queen Camilla watched water flow under a bridge, and Princess Anne kept calm and carried on.

It was a typical royal week in most senses, although there was some good news about the King’s health if you looked closely. On Friday evening came the news, confirmed calmly by Buckingham Palace, that the King and Queen had hosted the Duke and Duchess of Sussex and their children at Highgrove. Here is how the real royal week unfolded and how, on the King’s terms, it finally came to pass.
Continue reading

Meanwhile, Victoria Ward, our Deputy Royal Editor, has been with Prince Harry as he hits the road to promote next year’s Invictus Games.
For subscribers only

 

Anne Robinson with her dog, Martha, at her home in Gloucestershire

Anne Robinson: Why I’m ready to leave my £4m converted Cotswolds barn

Anne Robinson, the journalist and television presenter, is best known for hosting the BBC game show The Weakest Link. Here, the 81-year-old charts the eras of Cotswolds inhabitants from the Thatcher years to the tech bros and explains why she’s ready to move to the capital.

Continue reading

 

Gadi Eisenkot is Benjamin Netanyahu’s main challenger for the premiership

He lost his son in Gaza, now he’s coming for Netanyahu

Gadi Eisenkot is uncharismatic, stocky and gruff, but he’s coming for Benjamin Netanyahu. Carrying with him the agony of losing a son in Gaza, this former general is now ahead of the veteran prime minister in some opinion polls. Analysts believe it’s his perceived authenticity and lack of showmanship that makes him such a threat.

Continue reading

 

Nick Ross, 79, has personal experience of police inadequacies

Nick Ross: ‘Britain is a country run by amateurs’

When Nick Ross, the former Crimewatch presenter, was violently assaulted last summer, he expected justice. Instead, the veteran broadcaster was left entirely in the dark by the police and the Crown Prosecution Service. Britain’s criminal justice system has, he says, become a “conveyor belt by lawyers for lawyers”, which completely excludes the victims of crime.

Continue reading

 

Your Sunday

The summer health mistakes to avoid, from aloe vera to iced drinks

Whenever the sun makes an appearance, our summer health instincts should kick into gear. Whether it’s always using a high SPF or waiting 30 minutes after a meal before going for a swim, there is a lot we can do to protect ourselves. However, despite our best intentions, some well-meaning habits can end up doing more harm than good. Here are seven common mistakes to watch out for this summer.

Continue reading

 

Devil’s Advocate

The narcissistic cult of exercise has gone too far

Image of man riding on a burger
David Alexander

David Alexander

Deputy Head of Newsletters

 

Once upon a time, exercise was something to avoid. It meant labour: ploughing the fields, toiling in a factory, struggling down a mine. Liberation and happiness were to be found in a sedentary life.

This was the right approach. Exercise was an incidental aspect of a nobler aim – namely, providing for yourself and your family.

Now that we aren’t compelled to exercise, we fetishise it. Sets, and reps, and active recovery. Compound movements and progressive overloads. This is vanity’s modern vocabulary.

It is not enough to live in moderation nowadays. To exert ourselves usefully in the course of normal life: cycling to work occasionally; carrying heavy shopping; going for the odd ruminative wander.

To live like this is now considered pathetic. Rather, you should always have one eye trained on your body’s metrics, making a constant effort to burn fat and shred your poor, embattled muscles until they man up and become beefier.

“I don’t exercise just to look good!” I hear some readers protest, barely audible as their voices travel across their immense, protruding pectorals and into earshot. “I exercise because it makes me feel good.” Yeah, well, loads of physical activities may feel good, even when performed excessively. I’m thinking of overeating, the sister habit of heavy exercise.

Both are manifestations of the same misguided urge. A hyper-toned musculature represents over-indulgence just as much as a pot belly. They’re equally signs of obsessive self-absorption. We’re highly developed beings and we shouldn’t blindly pursue the sweet treat of an endorphin rush.

I’m not being a snob. I don’t think that gym bros should drop the dumbbells and pick up War and Peace, although that, done enough, would have the same effect on your biceps.

Books and culture retrieve you from your own self-absorption, though. So does going to the pub. Or visiting a cafe. We’re social beings who lived happily without mirrors for millennia. So stop gazing into them, get out of the gym and get off that Peloton.

Find a generous shirt that hides your drooping stomach, or wear one that’s too tight and let the world know that you have the correct priorities. In doing so, you will have forgotten how to exercise and remembered how to live.

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

 

One great life

Patricia Greene, voice of Jill Archer whose 68-year stint on The Archers set a world record

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/obituaries/2026/07/10/patricia-greene-jill-archer-archers-bbc-radio-4/

Patricia Greene with her MBE at Buckingham Palace in 1997

Patricia Greene, who has died aged 95, was the voice of farmer’s wife Jill in The Archers for 68 years, writes Jake Kerridge, Chief Obituary Writer.

She earned a place in the Guinness World Records as the world’s longest-serving actor in a soap opera, though when she joined the show in 1957 on a six-week contract she did not expect to stay long.

She was so inexperienced as a radio actress that when the script called for Jill to throw a glass of water over Phil Archer, she did it for real and drenched her co-star in the studio.

Greene remained with the programme for nearly 70 years, with Jill Archer evolving from a vivacious “sexy blonde” into the upright, sometimes meddlesome matriarch of a large and rather neurotic family.

Patricia Greene, second left, as Jill Archer, with Gwen Berryman, Norman Painting and Harry Oakes, admiring new-born twins in 1957

Jill became the radio serial’s most prolific baker, and her 60th anniversary on The Archers was marked with a storyline in which she was arrested for throwing a home-made flapjack at a celebrity chef while taking part in a protest against food waste.

Patricia Greene worked on The Archers until last year, latterly recording her lines from a care home.
Read the full obituary here

 

On this day

1985 | Doctors discover a cancerous growth in President Ronald Reagan’s colon

1998 | France beat Brazil 3-0 in the World Cup final

2018 | Donald Trump arrives in Britain for a four-day visit amid protests (and our front-page coverage from the following day can be found below)

Birthdays:
Malala Yousafzai (29), Annabel Croft (60), Sir Gareth Edwards (79)

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 BIOMARKER. 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.

Get early access to our Summer Sale

One year of free-thinking journalism, puzzles and more – all for just £19.

 

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