'Victory for our heroes' and 'Davina: Lorraine saved me'

  • Published

The headline on the front page of the Express reads: “Victory for our heroes”.
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A red poppy features on every front page this morning, with a number of the papers running special editions for Remembrance Sunday. Catherine, Princess of Wales, is front and centre of the Express, photographed wearing a poppy alongside Prince George at the Royal Albert Hall. The paper leads with an exclusive story detailing the Ministry of Defence's announcement that they will cover the costs of veterans making overseas commemoration trips.

The headline on the front page of the Mirror reads: “Medals for nuke test heroes”.
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In the Sunday edition of the Mirror, the paper details its own "campaign victory", which they say will see an increased number of veterans who were "involved in H-bomb testing" rewarded with a nuclear test medal.

The headline on the front page of the Sun reads: “Davina: Lorraine saved me”.
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Television presenter Davina McCall is pictured on the front page of the Sun, after she revealed on Instagram that she had been diagnosed with breast cancer. McCall, 58, said she had found a lump a few weeks ago. She was encouraged to get it examined after seeing posters from Lorraine Kelly's Change + Check campaign that urged women to "check your breasts".

The headline on the front page of the Star reads: “Davina: My breast cancer battle”.
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McCall "gets 'all-clear' after shock diagnosis" says the Star, noting that the celebrity says that she will not need chemotherapy following the removal of the cancerous lump in her breast.

The headline on the front page of the Observer reads: “Generation game”.
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The Observer's political editor Rachel Sylvester has commented on how Chancellor Rachel Reeves's "two up, two down" budget could affect young people in the UK, leading with the headline "Generation game".

The headline on the front page of the Telegraph reads: “BBC to say sorry for doctored Trump speech”.
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"BBC to say sorry for doctored Trump speech" reads the headline on the Sunday Telegraph, referring to concerns in Parliament and elsewhere over a report by the BBC's Panorama programme on US President Donald Trump and the Capitol riot in 2021. BBC chairman Samir Shah is due to "provide a full response to the Culture, Media and Sport Committee on Monday", the BBC said.

The headline on the front page of the Times reads: “BBC's apology for doctoring Trump speech”.
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The Times leads with a similar headline: "BBC's apology for doctoring Trump speech". Newman's cartoon pokes fun at the recent mistaken prisoner releases, depicting prison guards looking at an Advent calendar with the caption "All the doors are open".

The headline on the front page of the Mail reads: “Boris's blast at 'arrogant' Nick Robinson for claiming bias row is an anti-BBC plot”.
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Former Prime Minister Boris Johnson has condemned BBC presenter Nick Robinson for "claiming bias row is an anti-BBC plot", the Mail on Sunday reports. Speaking on Radio 4's flagship Today programme on Saturday, Robinson had said there was a "genuine concern about editorial standards and mistakes" at the BBC but there was also a "political campaign by people who want to destroy the organisation". Johnson called Robinson's remarks "ridiculous" and "arrogant".

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