Plus: why Cummings is indispensable and how Dallas and JR changed TV forever

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The Telegraph

Monday May 25 2020

From The Editor

 

By Chris Evans, Editor

 

The best of The Telegraph's articles, sent by the Editor

Dear reader,

Boris Johnson is standing by his chief adviser, Dominic Cummings, in the row over his trip from London to Durham during the lockdown. But why is the Prime Minister spending so much political capital defending an unelected adviser? Camilla Tominey explains what makes Mr Cummings indispensable to the PM.

While we are all understandably keen to look ahead to greater freedom, the last two months will not easily be forgotten. As Allison Pearson argues in this touching article, the lockdown has brought many costs but it has also forced us to reassess our lives and our country in ways both big and small, and many of the changes we’ve made are worth preserving.

Finally, while Britain is able to see some light at the end of the lockdown tunnel, it remains the case that on a global scale the pandemic continues to grow and grow. One area that seems to have bucked the trend is South Asia. However, as our correspondents have uncovered, that may, in fact, be due to deliberate covering up of the death toll by officials which could be leaving even more people at risk.

Chris

 

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My Choices

Dominic Cummings leaving the front door of 10 Downing Street

"The inconvenient truth is that Boris Johnson needs an enforcer" – Camilla Tominey explains why Dominic Cummings is more than just an adviser for Boris Johnson.

Composite image with various scenes from the UK's lockdown

Read Allison Pearson on what we’ve learnt from the "Great Pause" and why we should and will keep the good parts. (Free to read)

Illustration of lockdown

Your questions answered – our expert reporters on what to expect for the next two months on everything from Brexit to getting a haircut.

 
Workers in PPE wheel a wooden coffin out on a gurney in Indian Kashmir

Asia's hidden deaths – our correspondents lay bare the cover-up and undercounting of Covid-19 fatalities in South Asia. (Free to read)

A poster showing a painted image of JR with four revolvers pointed at him with questions marks of smoke emerging from the barrels

The summer when Britain nearly lost the plot – Find out how Dallas and the question of "who shot JR" created the first watercooler moment and changed television forever.

 

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Let us know how we're doing using the feedback button below or tweet me @chrisevans1. Although I am unable to respond individually to all the emails I receive, I am grateful to you for sending them to me.

 
 

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