If you want to receive twice-daily briefings like this by email, sign up to the Front Page newsletter here. For two-minute audio updates, try The Briefing - on podcasts, smart speakers and WhatsApp. Fears more aides will follow Lee Cain out No 10 door Boris Johnson is trying to prevent an exodus of his Downing Street staff. Key aide Lee Cain, No 10's director of communications, resigned last night after a public power struggle with the Prime Minister's fiancée Carrie Symonds. Dominic Cummings, Mr Johnson's most senior adviser, is understood to now be considering his position. Mr Cain announced he would quit after Ms Symonds effectively vetoed his promotion to chief of staff and amid an extraordinary briefing battle. Until now, the cracks spreading through Team Johnson during the Covid crisis had been largely under wraps. Associate Editor Camilla Tominey explains how the row over Mr Cain laid bare tensions at the heart of the administration. And this piece looks at other chief of staff contenders. In the race for a vaccine, have we ignored their flaws? The race for a coronavirus vaccine took an unexpected turn when Russia announced it had produced a jab with even better results than Pfizer's amid growing concern that the US version is "completely unworkable". Less than 48 hours after Pfizer claimed to have succeeded in producing a vaccine with 90 per cent efficacy, Moscow said its Sputnik-V candidate had reached 92 per cent. The flagrant one-upmanship may have raised some eyebrows. But, as Science Editor Sarah Knapton writes, there is mounting concern the desire to be first with a vaccine is leading to rushed announcements that send share prices soaring - but may ultimately fail to deliver. It came as it emerged Pfizer's chief executive sold shares worth $5.6m on the day of the firm's vaccine announcement. Meanwhile, the Government is to buy 200 million tests that can detect Covid in 15 minutes - with experts saying they could offer a "freedom pass" out of mass restrictions. Leaked documents reveal that contracts will be awarded next month, after research found that the £5 kits can detect three in four Covid cases in those with no symptoms. All sewn up: Prince Charles on his fashion collection The Prince of Wales has appeared on numerous best-dressed lists over the years - but the idea of him launching a fashion line would seem unlikely. That is what his charity has done today, unveiling an 18-piece luxury capsule collection for men and women. Head of Fashion Lisa Armstrong spoke to Prince Charles about his own style. And view a gallery of the best pieces to buy from the Modern Artisan collection. Sign up for our very special birthday offer The Telegraph website is celebrating its 26th birthday and offering readers a special subscriber offer. If you sign up today, you will pay just £1 per week for your first six months. Take advantage of the offer here. At a glance: More coronavirus headlines Economy | UK bounces back from recession with 15.5pc growth Guidance | Masks 'protect the wearers' - not just other people Testing | Fifth of positive antibody results are wrong, study suggests Aviation | London-New York route could reopen by Christmas £40k | Students find ways to make money as part-time jobs dry up Also in the news: Today's other headlines Police station ramming | Officers are investigating an attack last night in which a car was driven into a police station entrance in north London before an attempt was made to set it alight. See pictures from the aftermath, with the BMW having been smashed into the glass doors in Edmonton before the driver got out and poured petrol on the car. Matt | Today's cartoon: BBC faces Commons Panorama inquiry Brexit | Trade talks could 'fall apart', says Irish foreign minister Zoom | New Yorker writer fired for exposing himself on work call Channel | Migrant surge was preventable, borders chief claims Graham Norton | Star to take wage cut as he quits Radio 2 Around the world: Trump 'caught dead voters' Donald Trump's campaign alleged four dead people voted in Georgia's elections while making claims of widespread fraud. Republicans released obituaries of deceased residents whose names they claimed were used to cast ballots. Read more and view an election gallery.
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