Kate 'back on duty' and tax hike 'backlash'
- Published
Reaction to Donald Trump's re-election to the White House fills page after page in the papers. The Sunday Telegraph reports, external that the government is looking at possible "retaliatory moves" to fight back against the prospect of tariffs on British goods imported into the US.
According to the paper, ministers are "wargaming" the idea of imposing their own tariffs on American products.
The Observer reports , externalthat Chancellor Rachel Reeves will use her first Mansion House speech this week to argue that free and open trade is a "cornerstone" of the UK's economic policy - putting the government on what the paper calls a "direct collision course" with the president-elect.
In the paper's view, the issue is fast emerging as a "major test" for relations between Downing Street and the incoming Trump presidency - along with their differing views on the war in Ukraine.
In an article for the Sunday Times, external - timed to coincide with Remembrance Sunday - the head of the armed forces, Admiral Sir Tony Radakin, warns that the UK is facing a "decades-long security threat."
Citing the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, he argues the world has entered a new era of "competition and conquest."
The Sun on Sunday says, external the government has cut funding for cadet training in secondary schools - a move described by the Conservatives as "really depressing in Remembrance week."
The paper says the Department of Education has confirmed the decision, with 226 schools losing their grants for instructors. Cadets will still get other funding from the Ministry of Defence.
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