Unions sign open letter after Bernard Arnault issues staff with formal block on speaking to press
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The Telegraph’s mission is to provide content that inspires people to have the perspective they want to progress in life. It delivers quality, trusted, award-winning journalism, 24 hours a day, across its digital and print properties as well as through leading digital partners. Founded in 1855, The Telegraph has built a diversified commercial model, with equal strength in advertising, subscriptions and circulation, commerce, and events. In 1994, The Telegraph launched an online offering, the first UK publisher to do so. The launch in 2016 of a digital subscriptions model, with clearly defined open and premium content, has enhanced its ability to offer both scale and engagement to support this diversified approach. The Telegraph’s portfolio includes The Telegraph website and app, The Daily Telegraph and The Sunday Telegraph print titles, and The Telegraph Edition app which offers a digital replication of the newspapers. 27.2 million Britons consume content across the portfolio monthly, with a growing global digital audience through 107 million browsers a month enjoying The Telegraph’s perspective on the world. Additionally, The Daily Telegraph is the UK’s best selling quality broadsheet newspaper. *NRS PADD July 2017. Adobe Analytics, February 2017. Adobe Analytics incl: Web, FBIA, AMP, Live News App, Edition App & Apple News, May 2017.
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Updates
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Chinese-made Leapmotor T03 will be the second-cheapest on the market as Western brands race to launch their own affordable EVs
Vauxhall owner enters electric car ‘price war’ with £16k hatchback
telegraph.co.uk
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🇮🇹 A themed restaurant dedicated to Giorgia Meloni has been opened in #Albania in the region where the Italian government is about to unveil two offshore migrant centres. The restaurant, where the walls are adorned with dozens of colourful portraits of the Italian prime minister, is in the port of #Shengjin in the north of Albania. The town is the location for one of two migrant centres that the Italian coalition claims will be able to handle up to 36,000 asylum seekers a year. The facilities – one in Shengjin and another about 15 miles inland in the village of Gjader – are due to open in the next few weeks, after months of delays. The newly unveiled Trattoria #Meloni has been opened by Gjergj Luca, 58, a former actor who is the son of a well-known Albania actor. He said that he decided to dedicate the seafood restaurant to Italy’s first female prime minister because he regarded her as “extraordinary”. He said: “When cuisine, art and politics come together, you can make beautiful things.” Find out more: https://lnkd.in/eSsR5FrE
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High aspirations are the keys to career success, not the letters after your name
University can be valuable – but don’t expect it to secure your dream job
telegraph.co.uk
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✍️ Dear Richard Madeley, We’re getting married in the spring. My future wife’s younger sister is studying in America, and we’ve offered to fly her back for the wedding. The trouble is that I, too, have close relatives in far-flung places who have got wind of this and are (we suspect) trying it on, pleading poverty and warming up their excuses on various family WhatsApp chats. I would like them to be there and, while they’re not students, they are freelancers earning little money, so they might not be able to make it without support. We are paying for most of the wedding ourselves so dizzying sums of money just seem to get rolled up in the maelstrom. But something’s got to give. My wonderful fiancée is cool either way. Should we pony up for the tickets or should I resign myself to being outnumbered on the big day? — Mark, via telegraph.co.uk Read Richard Madeley's advice ⬇️ https://lnkd.in/eHNTwyaN
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Raid on tax-free cash risks forcing retirees into debt, downsizing and delayed retirement
How Labour’s tax raid will ruin pensioners’ lives
telegraph.co.uk
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Ask A Lawyer: our reader believes planning permission should have been sought beforehand
‘My neighbour’s offensive windows are ruining our street – how can I complain?’
telegraph.co.uk
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✍️ Jonathan Clements writes: I knew the news would be bad. But I didn’t expect it to be quite so grim. In early June, my oncologist told me I might have just a year to live. What should I do with those 12 precious months? I headed home from the appointment, grabbed a chair at the breakfast table, fired up my laptop, and settled down to another quiet day of writing and editing. That might strike some readers as denial, a reflection of our work-obsessed culture, or delusion about the importance of my work. But I prefer another explanation: the pursuit of happiness. Even before my oncologist offered her dire prediction, I’d been told I had stage four lung cancer that had metastasized to my brain, liver and chest – the result not of smoking, but of a defective gene. After I received that diagnosis, I sat on the edge of my bed in the intensive care unit, and found myself drawing up a list of my life’s good fortune: a close-knit family, a career doing what I love, financial security, a loving spouse who would be there to the end. Those were among the things that had brought richness to my life over the prior 61 years. Why would I turn my back on them now? I didn’t want to waste my final months feeling angry at my bad luck, or despairing over the time I’d never have, or hunting for a cure that didn’t exist. Instead, I wanted to take whatever time I had left and squeeze as much happiness out of it as possible. Read Jonathan's story in full here ⬇️ https://lnkd.in/egXP5tmj
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Civil Nuclear Constabulary to expand its presence as climate activists target fossil fuels
Ed Miliband sends armed police to guard gas terminals
telegraph.co.uk
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Experts warn that wealthier households will be squeezed further if Labour raises taxes
Richest households lose £3,500 in just a year
telegraph.co.uk