Andrew faces Commons 'humiliation' and 'Mansion tax raid'

  • Published

The headline on the front page of the Sunday Times reads: "Andrew faces humiliation in the Commons".
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Liberal Democrats have signalled they intend to use their next Opposition Day debate to discuss "officially removing" Prince Andrew's Duke of York title and his "continued use of Royal Lodge", the Sunday Times reports. MPs will "defy years of convention" to discuss the royal's future, who the paper says faces a "pincer movement from parliament and Buckingham Palace" to formally strip him of his dukedom and banish him from the 30-room mansion in Windsor.

The headline on the front page of the the Observer reads: "Who trolled Viriginia Giuffre?"
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An investigation into "who trolled Virginia Giuffre", the prominent accuser of the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, is the lead for the Observer.

The headline on the front page of the Mail on Sunday reads: "Reeves is plotting mansion tax raid on homes".
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Chancellor Rachel Reeves is plotting a "mansion tax raid on homes", according to the Mail on Sunday. The paper reports she plans to impose a charge of 1% of the amount by which a property exceeds £2m, a "class war plan" which critics say would "punish hard work and aspiration".

The headline on the front page of the Independent on Sunday reads: "Reeves faces pressure to increase income tax for highest earners".
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The chancellor's tax plans also lead the Independent, which reports that Reeves is "under pressure" to break a Labour manifesto pledge and tax the highest earners. It comes as the chancellor looks to plug a £40bn "black hole" in the Budget.

The headline on the front page of the Sunday Telegraph reads: "Starmer told to bin workers' rights".
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The Sunday Telegraph reports that Labour plans to give workers a day-one right against unfair dismissal risks "crippling the jobs market", according to the government's "favourite" think-tank. The Resolution Foundation tells the paper that it will oppose plans that give "little obvious gains to workers".

The headline on the front page of the Sunday Express reads: "90% of councils to house migrants by end of the year".
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More than 90% of councils will house asylum seekers by the end of the year, leads the Sunday Express. Around 40,000 people will be given taxpayer-funded homes across England, the paper writes, "as ministers ramp up efforts to close migrant hotels".

The headline on the front page of the Sunday Mirror reads: "Stephen Fry nearly died after cocaine binge".
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Comedian Ben Elton tells the Sunday Mirror that he "saved the most celebrated brain in showbiz" in 1992, after he took Stephen Fry to hospital following a "cocaine binge". At the time, doctors said Fry was "minutes from death or brain damage".

The headline on the front page of the Sunday People reads: "Forest lair of Maddie suspect".
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Sunday People reports on the "forest lair" of Christian Brückner, the man investigated in connection to the disappearance of Madeleine McCann. Brückner has not been charged and denies any involvement in the case.

The headline on the front page of the Daily Star reads: "Privates on parade".
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"Privates on parade" is the splash for the Daily Star, which reports that the number of British troops accused of "flashing" has risen 300% in the past year.

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