'Biggest cuts since austerity' and 'evil' family killer

  • Published

Front page of the Guardian for Thursday 20 March 2025.
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Next week's Spring Statement will include the "biggest cuts since austerity", the Guardian reports, after major reforms to disability benefits were announced earlier this week. Chancellor Rachel Reeves will tell MPs on Thursday she intends to cut Whitehall budgets by "billions more than expected", the paper says. Economists have said the cuts will "harm key public services", it adds.

Front page of the I Paper for Thursday 19 March 2025.
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Reeves will not raise taxes when she delivers the Spring Statement on Wednesday, the i Paper reports. But future cuts to benefits are "now likely", it says. It adds that rebellion is "still brewing" within Labour over the government's plan to save £5bn on disability and welfare payments.

Front page of the Metro for Thursday 19 March 2025.
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Other front pages focus on triple-murderer Nicholas Prosper, who was "arrested by chance" on the way to carry out more killings at his former school, the Metro reports. "Stopped on massacre mission" is its headline.

Front page of the Daily Express for Thursday 20 March 2025.
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The Daily Express says that "'evil' family killer" Prosper was "forced to hear his fate" in court after a judge ordered him to stop "cowering in his cell". The teenager was jailed for 49 years on Wednesday for killing his mother, brother and sister.

Front page of the Daily Mail for Thursday 20 March 2025.
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An independent review finds that biological sex has been "erased from official data", the Daily Mail reports. Crime and health records are instead listing a person's gender, the paper adds.

Front page of the Daily Telegraph for Thursday 20 March 2025.
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The Daily Telegraph says criminals are "free to pick their own gender" because the government is "refusing to force police to record biological sex". Its story is also based on a review into sex and gender data collection.

Front page of the Daily Star for Thursday 19 March 2025.
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Astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore received a "flippering fab welcome home" after nine months stuck in space, the Daily Star says. Dolphins are pictured alongside the pair's capsule in the sea on the paper's front page.

Front page of the Financial Times for Thursday 19 March 2025.
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The US Federal Reserve has slashed its growth forecast as President Donald Trump's tariffs have "cast a shadow" over the economy, the Financial Times reports.

Front page of the Times for Thursday 20 March 2025.
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Trump is eyeing a "takeover of Ukraine's atomic sites", according to the Times. The president has now "moved beyond" a proposed minerals deal with the country which did not mention nuclear power, the paper says.

Front page of the Mirror for Thursday 20 March 2025.
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"I'd do it all again" is the Daily Mirror's headline, alongside a picture of a smiling Matt Hancock. The former health secretary defended the "VIP lane" for pandemic-era PPE contracts at the Covid inquiry on Wednesday, which allowed "pals of the Tories" to be "fast-tracked" for deals, the paper reports.

Front page of the Sun for Thursday 20 March 2025.
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Former Casualty star Amanda Mealing crashed her car while on cocaine, "seriously injuring a nurse", the Sun reports. The actress admitted drug-driving and was handed a 22-month driving ban on Wednesday. The crash took place in Lincolnshire in January of last year.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves pictured in Canary Wharf, London in FebruaryImage source, PA Media
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The Guardian says Chancellor Rachel Reeves will announce major spending cuts in her Spring Statement next week

The Guardian looks ahead with trepidation to the chancellor's Spring Statement next week, reporting that Rachel Reeves will announce the biggest spending cuts since austerity - after she ruled out tax rises to tackle the budget deficit.

According to the paper, the move could mean reductions of 7% for some departments over the next four years. It says economists have warned that key public services will be harmed, while Labour MPs are concerned the cuts will put more pressure on the poorest families.

The Daily Mail takes aim at the plans announced by the government earlier this week to fix the welfare system, warning that those who want to get off benefits and enter the workforce may be frustrated by a lack of jobs.

An image of Nicholas Prosper is featured on the front page of The Daily Express, after the teenager was told he would spend a minimum of 49 years in prison for murdering three members of his family and planning a massacre at a school. The paper says the killer was "forced to hear his fate" by what it calls a "common-sense" judge who ordered him to attend court to hear his sentence.

Gun laws will be changed in the wake of the case, the Daily Telegraph says, compelling sellers of firearms to inform police before they hand over weapons to buyers.

The Times focuses on yesterday's phone call between Donald Trump and Volodymyr Zelensky - after the US president told his Ukrainian counterpart that an American takeover of nuclear power plants controlled by Kyiv would offer the "best protection" for the country's infrastructure.

The paper notes that the White House said Trump had "moved beyond" the minerals deal that was suspended after his explosive public row with Zelensky last month.

The Guardian suggests the first conversation between the presidents since their "Oval Office horror" has helped to turn the page on a low point in relations, with Ukrainian officials saying they are now on "sounder footing" with the Trump administration.

The Sun claims to have seen leaked government papers that suggest the drive to achieve net zero within 25 years risks wiping 10% off economic growth by the end of the decade and triggering a financial crash.

The paper describes the impact assessment forecasts as "terrifying hard evidence" of the national ruin it has long predicted, and urges Sir Keir Starmer to scrap the 2050 target "before Labour presides over our bankruptcy". The government has told The Sun that net zero is the "economic opportunity of the 21st Century", delivering good jobs, economic growth and energy security.

With the headline, "I'd Do It All Again", the Daily Mirror highlights the latest appearance of the former health secretary, Matt Hancock, at the Covid Inquiry. It reports that he defended the "VIP lane" that fast-tracked PPE contracts to companies recommended by MPs or civil servants, arguing the system saved lives and should be used again during the next pandemic.

But the paper says Hancock was criticised by bereaved families who lost relatives to Covid, with one accusing the then Conservative government of "lining the pockets of their mates with public money".

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