Emmanuel Macron’s visit to the UK in the UK on Tuesday, along with the French President, has splashed many of the front pages. The Times reports that Sir Kir Stmper Macron will urge that they agree on the “one, a” migrant return deal, despite the warning that announced before it is ready to increase the crossing. In addition, there is a poignant picture of painted girls, who died or missing after floods in Texas, swept away through their summer camp.
Macron’s visit also leads the Daily Telegraph, which reports paper reporting that King Charles III will tell Macron when the French President comes. There are “no limitations” among us, Raja will say, in a petition for cooperation, Sir Kir fights to save a migrant return deal. The main image suggests that a police officer was accused of attacking Manchester Airport as CCTV footage of the incident, the gamblers were played. 20 -year -old Mohammad Fahir Amaz and 26 -year -old his brother, Muhammad Amad, is said to have been called for an incident at Starbucks Cafe in Terminal 2 on July 23 last year. Both men, Rochedale, from Greater Manchester, deny the allegations.
Prior to the French President’s visit, Daily Mail says, “Return £ 771 million, Mr. Macron … S’il Vous Plait.” Paper says Macron “will face questions on his country’s failure to dent illegal channel crossing – despite the British taxpayers handing over more than three -fourths of more than three billion pounds of money.” Also printed on the front page, Erin Patterson’s face, Australian woman who was found guilty of killing three relatives and serving wild mushrooms in one lunch.
The Surya Jeffrey goes with the latest development in Epstein case. The paper reports that a leaked memo suggests that FBI is shutting down its investigation at Epstein’s link in Prince Andrew, which means Andrew is free to travel abroad without fear of arrest. In 2019, Epstein died in a New York Jail cell as he waited to prosecute allegations of sex trafficking. Prince Andrew has always denied any misconduct.
Closing Prince Andrew’s investigation also leads the daily mirror, with a late financier’s “fierce hunting” that they have “silenced” again. The US Department of Justice and the FBI concluded that sex criminal Epstein did not have a so-called customer list that could implicate high-profile colleagues, and they took their lives-opposed the principles of conspiracy organized for a long time.
The Guardian reports that the owners in the UK will be banned from using non-recipient agreements, which are to give silence to the employees who have faced harassment and discrimination in the workplace, if the government workers’ rights overhal are approved. An amendment to the Employment Rights Bill, which is expected to enact law later this year, will zero any privacy agreements to prevent workers from speaking about harassment or discrimination allegations.
Labor’s planning law is branded “hypocrisy on stilts”, Daily Express Report, ministers insisted on building 1.5 million new houses – despite opposing earlier development in their own constituencies. Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rener and Housing Minister Matthew Penicuk are leading the push for the scheme and infrastructure bills that have promoted a wide backlash to threaten protected houses and wildlife. The pair are among half a dozen labor MPs, who have opposed similar development in the past.
Donald Trump’s tariff led the Financial Times, the US President extended his time limit for the “mutual” levy. The US announced a new 25% tax on products entering the country from South Korea and Japan, which will apply on August 1 when the latest recurrence ends. Trump began sharing a batch of letters to leaders of countries around the world, underlining his tariff plans. The main image center of the paper on London Mayor Sir Sadiq Khan and Sir Keir makes a wreath at the memorial of July 7 on the 20th anniversary of the London bomb blasts.
The Eye Paper reports that the Labor Government’s revised welfare bill, which came after a backbench rebellion in the Commons, would get 50,000 children and 50,000 adults out of relative poverty. Prior to the government’s climb last week, it was predicted that the bill would put 250,000 people into poverty.
Erin Patterson’s decision in Australia leads the front page of the metro. It reports that the ex-husband of “Mushroom Katil” says that she tried to poison her at least four times with a deadly dinner who killed her parents and aunt.
And finally, the Daily Star says that scientists have invented a weedable “intoxicated”, which triggers a phone alert to tell you if you are at risk of dehydration and future hangover.