
Telegraph nominated for 18 Press Awards
The Telegraph has been shortlisted for 18 honours at this year's Press Awards, including daily and Sunday newspapers of the year.
Our revelation that the Oxford-AstraZeneca Covid vaccine had been branded 'defective' in a multi-million-pound landmark legal case is nominated for scoop of the year.
The category for best news podcast includes Ukraine: The Latest, which has now reached 100 million downloads and continues to provide daily updates and analysis.
Robert Mendick is nominated for news reporter of the year, Laura Donnelly for health journalist of the year, Neil McCormick for critic of the year and Matt Pritchett for cartoonist of the year.
Danielle Sheridan, defence editor, is shortlisted for specialist reporter of the year for revealing the contents of a speech by the head of the British Army, in which he warned that the British public would be called up to fight if the UK went to war.
Szu Ping Chan is nominated for business and finance journalist of the year for her agenda-setting scoop that Rachel Reeves, the Chancellor, was preparing to reveal a multi-billion-pound black hole in the public finances.
There are nominations for Jeremy Wilson and Oliver Brown in Sport, Chris Leadbeater and Greg Dickinson in travel, and Ben Butcher in data.
Simon Townsley is shortlisted for photographer of the year for assignments including his astonishing images of drug addicts on the streets of Vancouver.
A picture of a sodden Rishi Sunak announcing the general election last May, above the headline 'Things can only get wetter', is a contender for front page of the year.
Meanwhile, the excellence in diversity category includes The Telegraph's Media Literacy Programme
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Western Telegraph
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Starmer and Reynolds meet US commerce secretary in push to implement trade deal
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North Wales Chronicle
30 minutes ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Reeves to promise investment in ‘renewal' as she unveils spending plans
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South Wales Argus
an hour ago
- South Wales Argus
Reeves to promise investment in ‘renewal' as she unveils spending plans
The Chancellor is expected to announce big increases in spending on the NHS, defence and schools as part of a spending review set to include £113 billion of investment thanks to looser borrowing rules. She will also reveal changes to the Treasury's 'green book' rules that govern which projects receive investment in an effort to boost spending outside London and the South East. Arguing that this investment is 'possible only because of the stability I have introduced' after the October budget, Ms Reeves is expected to say her spending review will 'ensure that renewal is felt in people's everyday lives, their jobs, their communities'. She will say: 'The priorities in this spending review are the priorities of working people. 'To invest in our country's security, health and economy so working people all over our country are better off.' Among the other announcements expected at the spending review is £39 billion for affordable homes over the next 10 years as the Government seeks to meet its promise of building 1.5 million homes by the next election. The Treasury said this would see annual investment in affordable housing rise to £4 billion by 2029/30, almost double the average of £2.3 billion between 2021 and 2026. A Government source said: 'We're turning the tide against the unacceptable housing crisis in this country with the biggest boost to social and affordable housing investment in a generation, delivering on our plan for change commitment to get Britain building.' The Chancellor has also already announced some £15.6 billion of spending on public transport in England's city regions, and £16.7 billion for nuclear power projects, the bulk of which will fund the new Sizewell C plant in Suffolk. But the spending review is expected to set out tough spending limits for departments other than health, defence and education. Although Ms Reeves is reported to have agreed to an above-inflation increase in the policing budget, this is thought to have come at the expense of cuts in other parts of Home Office spending. And sources close to London Mayor Sir Sadiq Khan have expressed concern that the spending review will have nothing for the capital. Ahead of the spending review, the Institute for Fiscal Studies has warned that any increase in NHS funding above 2.5% is likely to mean real-terms cuts for other departments or further tax rises to come in the budget this autumn. Chancellor Rachel Reeves will deliver her spending review (PA) The Chancellor has already insisted that her fiscal rules remain in place, along with Labour's manifesto commitment not to increase income tax, national insurance or VAT. She will say on Wednesday: 'I have made my choices. In place of chaos, I choose stability. In place of decline, I choose investment. In place of retreat, I choose national renewal. 'These are my choices. These are this Government's choices. These are the British people's choices.'