“The doctors read the headline of The Daily Express” with the demand for payment to the patients, in which resident doctors planned to go out for five consecutive days till 30 July in a dispute about payment. Prince George is painted smiling on the front page before his twelfth birthday.
The Daily Mail has also led a planned strike, writing that the British Medical Association has created a £ 1M “war chest” to fund the campaign for resident doctors to get a 29%salary increase.
The Water Commission is ready to give its review of the industry on Monday morning, but the Metro warned that it would “fail to end a national scam”. There has been an increase in public outrage on rising bills and sewage discharge in the UK waterways.
The main story of the Guardian is about the failures in NHS Maternity Care, writing that the Health Service has been facing a potential bill of £ 27BN for negligence in England since 2019. Paper says that in 2023, the number of families who took legal action against NHS for maternity errors was doubled in 2007, which was all three for the front page. Aid died in queues on Sunday.
Mirror says that England defender Jess Carter after the Euro Quarter Finals, after online abuse, “we stand with Jess”. The FA chiefs called the slars “disgusting” and said that they were working with the police to find those responsible people.
Carter is also depicted in front of the Daily Telegraph. The main headline of the paper states “Faraj: I will build more jails to clean the roads”, on Monday with the reform leader to give a speech that “deploys its party as the most difficult party on law and order which this country has ever seen”.
Lionus Jess Carter is also a feature image for The Times, “stand up to racism” with caption. The top story of the paper states that “Reeves defeated call over call for wealth tax”. It reports that Chancellor Rachel Reeves is expected to reject pressure to implement tax on high -income earners. Former labor leader Lord Kinnok has claimed that 2% tax on assets of more than £ 10m may bring more than £ 11bn, but cabinet ministers have indicated other countries as evidence of their warnings that funds do not work.
The fight between Apple and Home Office is the major story for the financial Times. FT States Downing Street is facing “forced retreat” due to pressure from senior leaders in Washington. Earlier this year, Apple was ordered to provide access to customer data under the Investigation Powers Act. Paper reported to two senior officials, saying that forcing the tech giant to break his end-to-end encryption, technology partnership with the US could be disrupted.
I paper has warned that “the age of state pension may increase once again”. A government review will see whether the age of pension should be reduced to 68 before the employed rollout date of 2046.
Surya reported fear on “Gazza Dash to A&E”. The paper states that football legend Paul Geskoine was taken to intensive care on Friday evening, but his condition is now “stable”.
“Footed now on NHS!” The Daily Star reads, claiming that doctors have been designed to hand over tickets for football matches to patients suffering from depression.