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‘ Ace News Room U.K Daily News Desk ‘

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: May.30: 2023:

#AceDailyNews says here’s todays Newspaper Headlines: Its all about the ‘ OPPOSITION LABOUR HOUSING PLAN ‘ of buying land CHEAPLY to tackle the HOUSING CRISIS but GIVING COUNCILS short of MONEY will it be USED for the purpose PROVIDED & BANKS RIPPING OFF SAVERS Kindness & Love XX says 🙏🙏’s Lord Thy God ‘ For ALL PARTIES to AGREE Amen

The headline in the Guardian reads: "Labour to let councils buy land cheaply to tackle housing crisis"
A variety of stories lead Tuesday’s papers. The Guardian says Labour wants to give local development authorities in England “sweeping powers” to buy land at a “fraction of its potential cost” if they want to build on it. It says that, under the plans, officials could use compulsory purchase orders to buy land without having to include a premium currently granted to land on which a developer hopes to secure planning permission.
The headline in the Financial Times reads: "Labour plans land valuation reform to ease housing crisis"
The Financial Times says the proposals are part of Labour’s plans to ease the housing crisis and go “far beyond recent government moves to allow ministers to make landowners sell holdings more cheaply in limited cases”. It adds that housebuilding is “set to be a big theme in the next election”.
The headline in the i reads: "Households urged to recycle less to cut waste"
Households are to be urged to recycle less in order to cut waste, according to the i. The paper says too many non-recyclable items – including plastic bags, toothpaste tubes, and crisp packets – are being placed in recycling bins, contaminating the recycle process, and that new advice will say they should be binned instead.
The headline in Express reads: "Stop banks 'ripping off' loyal savers"
The Daily Express says high street banks are being accused of “ripping off” loyal customers by offering “unjustifiably low” returns on savings despite recent rises in interest rates. The paper quotes former pensions minister Sir Steve Webb calling for “effective and enforced action” by regulators.
The headline in the Telegraph reads: "PM backs feminist in Oxford row over free speech"
Speaking to the Daily Telegraph, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has backed an academic whose invitation to speak at the Oxford Union has sparked a row. Professor Kathleen Stock, a key gender-critical figure, is due to speak at the Union on Tuesday, but her invitation has led to protests. Mr Sunak tells the paper “university should be an environment where debate is supported, not stifled”.
The headline in the Times reads: "Legal wrangle looms over Johnson's WhatsApp chats"
The Times says the Cabinet Office is “resolute in its view” that it does not need to provide Boris Johnson’s WhatsApp messages in full to the Covid-19 inquiry, which is due to get under way in the next fortnight. The inquiry has requested access to messages exchanged between the then-prime minister and 40 other people involved in the government’s response to the pandemic. The paper says ministers are set for a “bitter legal battle” over the issue.
The headline in the Metro reads: "Crisis at ITV deepens: The gloves are off"
Former This Morning presenter Eamonn Holmes has waded into the row surrounding the show, the Metro reports. It comes after Phillip Schofield, who resigned last week after admitting to having an affair with a younger colleague, put out a statement denying claims that the culture on the show had become “toxic”. The paper says pressure on ITV bosses was already building and that Holmes’s intervention will only deepen the crisis.
The headline in the Mirror reads: "Danger dogs epidemic: I lost my little boy... this must stop"
The Mirror carries a call from the mother of 10-year-old Jack Lis, who was mauled to death by an XL Bully dog, for a new law to prevent more children from dying. Emma Whitfield, 32, tells the paper: “The government needs to act now”.
The headline in the Star reads: "A pint of foam please barman"
And the Star says “we’ve been drinking beer all wrong” and that, according to a beer historian, having a large, foamy head on a pint is “better for your belly”.

A variety of stories lead Tuesday’s papers.

The Times leads with what it calls the “bitter legal battle” brewing about the government’s refusal to hand over all of Boris Johnson’s full, unredacted WhatsApp messages to the Covid-19 inquiry. The paper says ministers are unlikely to change their minds and could seek a judicial review in an attempt to circumvent the demands of the inquiry chairwoman, Baroness Hallett.

It adds that several current and former ministers are supporting the Cabinet Office position because they’re “unhappy about the possibility of their messages being exposed”. In an editorial, the paper makes clear it believes Lady Hallett is right to believe it’s for her to decide what is relevant to her inquiry, and not civil servants trying “save the blushes of ministers”.

The Guardian says Labour is planning to force landowners to sell plots cheaply to help cut home-building costs in England if it wins the next election.

New laws would allow local authorities to buy up land without having to factor in what’s called the “hope value”, a huge premium added to the value of land on which developers hope to secure planning permission.

The paper quotes a Labour source saying the party wanted to “tilt the balance of power” away from landowners and more towards communities which could benefit from having homes. 

The Financial Times says says Labour’s proposals go beyond current government moves to force land to be sold cheaply in some limited cases. It says housebuilding is “set to be a big theme in the next election”. 

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer and deputy leader Angela Rayner during a visit to a housing development in South Ribble in Lancashire. The pair are seen on a scaffold wearing hard hats and high vis jackets.
The Labour Party reportedly wants to force landowners to sell land more cheaply as part of efforts to ease the housing crisis

Speaking to the Daily Telegraph, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has backed an academic whose invitation to speak at the Oxford Union has sparked a row. Professor Kathleen Stock, a key gender-critical figure, is due to speak at the Union on Tuesday, but her invitation has led to protests. Mr Sunak tells the paper “university should be an environment where debate is supported, not stifled”.

The Daily Mail reports that Sir Keir Starmer is under fire for accepting a party donation of £1.5m from a leading Just Stop Oil funder. It says Labour has been challenged to distant itself from what it calls “eco-zealots” by returning funds donated by Dale Vincent, the founder of the green energy company Ecotricity.

The Daily Mirror says a grieving mother has joined its campaign to have laws about dangerous dogs overhauled. Emma Whitfield’s 10-year-old son, Jack Lis, was mauled to death by an XL Bully, a new and larger version of the American bulldog. She tells the paper that “this has to stop” and that the “government needs to act now”.

And high street banks are being accused of “ripping off” loyal customers by offering “unjustifiably low” returns on savings despite recent rises in interest rates, according to the Daily Express. The paper quotes former pensions minister Sir Steve Webb calling for “effective and enforced action” by regulators.

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