'Lost Angeles' and 'Musk seeks plan to oust Starmer'
- Published
Several papers lead for a second day on the turmoil facing UK bond markets.
The Daily Mail says experts are warning, external Rachel Reeves that she is facing a debt crisis "like the 1970s".
Daily Telegraph says the Conservatives have accused, external the chancellor of being "missing in action", after she decided to go ahead with a planned investment trip to China.
"Rattled Reeves searches for new ideas on growth", is the headline on the front of the Times. It says she has asked members of the cabinet, external to come up with measures to bolster the economy.
The i newspaper quotes the prime minister's spokesperson, external who says Reeves "has been clear she's not coming back for tax or borrowing to increase the spending envelope".
The Guardian says it has been told by officials, external that she is prepared to reduce departmental spending even more than planned.
TheDaily Mirror reports that a Home Office counter-extremism unit, external is monitoring recent posts by Elon Musk on his social media platform, X.
The paper says it understands the tweets are "being assessed to see if they are a danger to Britain".
The article says the monitoring was "ramped up" after Mr Musk made what it describes as "vile" comments about the safeguarding minister, Jess Phillips.
The devastation caused by the wildfires in Los Angeles is pictured on several of the front pages.
The Sun shows an entire neighbourhood that has been wiped out, alongside the headline "lost Angeles".
The Telegraph has an image of firefighters battling flames on a street lit by an orange glow. In a dispatch for the paper, a reporter in LA compares one of the worst affected areas - the Pacific Palisades - to a "wasteland".
The Times says the disaster has become a "political firestorm", with Donald Trump blaming California's Democratic leaders for the calamity.
The Guardian splashes on European climate scientists, external finding that 2024 was the hottest year on record.
They say extreme weather was supercharged causing "misery for millions of people". The Guardian expects 2024 to also feature a record amount of greenhouse gas emissions and reports that the world is on track for a catastrophic 2.7C rise in global heating.
The Daily Express says Shamima Begum, external - who left Britain when she was a teenager to join the Islamic State group - could, in its words, "run free within days", after the camp where she is being held in Syria came under attack.
The paper says that Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces running detention camps have been hit by Turkish airstrikes and ground assaults by HTS, the group that took charge of Syria after the downfall of Bashar al-Assad.
A former guard is quoted as saying that if the SDF feel they can not defend the prison camps "they will open the gates of hell".
There is high praise for the Prince of Wales for his public tribute to his wife on her 43rd birthday.
Several front pages carry the black and white photo of Catherine that he released yesterday - alongside a message in which praises her "remarkable" strength over the last year.
The Mail says the picture, taken last summer, "captures her joy at completing a course of preventative chemotherapy".
The Express says that by showing their emotions the Prince and Princess of Wales are "also showing how vulnerability is very much a strength".
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