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Then after 11 years' reporting for The Daily Mail, Evans joined The Daily Telegraph as a news editor in January 2007. He was recruited by The Daily Telegraph's then editor, Sir William Lewis, on strong advice from his deputy, Tony Gallagher, now editor of The Times. Said to have a "solid news background" with populist news instincts, Evans ...
[49] Assistant comment editor of the Daily Telegraph Sherelle Jacobs also used the term in 2019. [50] The Daily Telegraph also published an anonymous civil servant who stated: "There is a strong presence of Anglophobia, combined with cultural Marxism that runs through the civil service." [51]
Letters to the Editor (LTEs) have been a feature of American newspapers since the 18th century. [citation needed] Many of the earliest news reports and commentaries published by early-American newspapers were delivered in the form of letters, and by the mid-18th century, LTEs were a dominant carrier of political and social discourse.
Daily Telegraph and Morning Post, no. 33,010 (Tuesday 6 June): 16. Mitchell, Donald. 1961b. "Critics Were Not Deceived: Zak and His 'Mobile'", letter to the editor, Daily Telegraph and Morning Post (Friday 18 August): 10.
In February 2019, Jacobs was criticised by Owen Jones [13] for using the term "Cultural Marxism" in an editorial for the Daily Telegraph. [14] In April 2024, Jacobs argued that Israel's continued assault on Gaza was "existentially vital – for both Israel but (sic) the wider West". [15]
Camilla Tominey (born 14 June 1978) is a British journalist, broadcaster, and commentator. She is associate editor and executive editor of The Daily Telegraph.She also writes a weekly column for the newspaper and co-hosts The Daily T podcast with Kamal Ahmed.
Sir Max Hugh Macdonald Hastings (/ ˈ h eɪ s t ɪ ŋ z /; born 28 December 1945) [1] is a British journalist and military historian, [2] who has worked as a foreign correspondent for the BBC, editor-in-chief of The Daily Telegraph, and editor of the Evening Standard. He is also the author of thirty books, most significantly histories, which ...
In a Telegraph article published shortly after the programme was aired, he jibed at its portrayal of him as a "Sorcerer's Apprentice" who wilfully nourished conspiracy theories, and condemned it for refusing to acknowledge that it was "the failure of the co-opted White House press corps and those on the FBI beat – or, in some cases, their ...