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The latest headlines in several papers revolve around a company related to Baroness Mone and her husband being ordered to pay £122m in damages for breaching a government contract to supply personal protective equipment during the Covid pandemic. The Metro’s headline amusingly plays with the couple’s last name in “Mone Mone Mone.” Similarly, the Sun demands the money owed with the headline “Cough up COVID £122m” and Chancellor Rachel Reeves calling for Baroness Mone’s resignation from the House of Lords.
The Daily Mirror highlights the demand from Covid victim families to strip Baroness Mone of her title after a company linked to her was directed to return £122m for selling faulty gowns to the government during the pandemic. The Daily Mail echoes this sentiment with its headline “Baroness bra told: hand back our £122m” and underlines that she was ennobled by former Prime Minister David Cameron in 2015.
The Daily Star takes a different approach with a headline suggesting the Health Secretary, Wes Streeting, pay back money, while also featuring a comparison of Streeting to an onion. The Financial Times turns its attention to the Home Office’s latest push for Apple user data, drawing parallels of the order to “Chinese state surveillance” during the Trump administration. The Guardian reports on Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer’s remarks regarding the end of “resettlement and family union rights” for asylum seekers.
The i Paper, Times, Daily Express, and Daily Telegraph provide a mix of stories ranging from refugee rights to a condemning statement from a judge at the sentencing of a paedophile gang in Rochdale, and Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch’s strong stance against current climate change laws in the UK, advocating for a cleaner environment without bankrupting the country
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