AceDailyNews says here’s todays Newspaper Headlines: Its all about PM Sunak as Tories eye motorists’ vote’ and not allowing 20MPH speed limit in towns as Hunt says no more ‘ Tax Cuts ‘ and Kindness & Love says 🙏🙏’s Lord Thy God for leaders to put PeopleB4Profit Amen
@acenewsservices
Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: Sept.30: 2023: Media Headlines News: TELEGRAM Ace Daily News Link https://t.me/+PuI36tlDsM7GpOJe
The Times has interviewed Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt ahead of the Conservative Party conference, which is due to start next week. He says reforms to public services and the benefits system are needed in order to allow the Treasury to be able to cut taxes – but it is the party’s plans to woo motorists that have caught the attention of several other of Saturday’s papers.The Tories are hoping to win over motorists ahead of the next general election, the Daily Express reports. It has spoken to Transport Secretary Mark Harper about his plans to halt what the papers calls an “anti-car campaign”. The main image is of an elated Rory McIlroy celebrating after a brilliant start for Europe in the Ryder Cup golf tournament.The Conservatives are eyeing a host of driver-friendly policies ahead of the next election, the i reports. The paper references comments made by the prime minister in the Sun, in which he criticised Low Traffic Neighbourhoods and said he is “slamming the brakes on the war on motorists”.Rishi Sunak has a “path to victory”, the Daily Mail declares, citing polling carried out by Survation on its behalf. The main image shows Ava Evans, who found herself at the centre of the crisis engulfing GB News after host Laurence Fox made what the channel’s boss said were “appalling” comments about her live on air.Home Secretary Suella Braverman has refused to meet Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby to discuss her rhetoric on immigration, the Daily Telegraph says. It also reports the government is planning to roll out a national parking app to replace the myriad of platforms motorists currently need to use.The Financial Times’ main story concerns allegations about the workplace conduct of former BP chief executive Bernard Looney, who left the company earlier this month. The paper also reports that holiday season is getting under way in China, with 800 million trips expected to be made during the longest national holiday the country has had since pandemic restrictions were lifted.The Daily Mirror devotes its front page to the tragic death of Jessica Barker, 15, in a Merseyside school bus crash. The teenager and the driver of the coach were killed when the vehicle overturned on the M53.Victoria Beckham is still angry about the abuse her husband received after his infamous red card against Argentina in the 1998 World Cup, the Sun reports. The interview is taken from a Netflix documentary about David Beckham due to be released in the UK this week.As is its want, the Daily Star goes in a different direction to the rest of the newspapers. Its front page is dominated by the news that polling has revealed that Brits like pineapple on their pizza after all.
The Daily Telegraph reports that Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby has been seeking a meeting with Home Secretary Suella Braverman to raise concerns about her rhetoric on immigration.
But he is said to have been “rebuffed” in what the paper calls an “apparent snub”. The details are from parliamentary magazine The House which has carried out an investigation into relations between the Conservatives and the Church of England.
A source tells the Telegraph there is “shock” in Lambeth Palace about the home secretary’s reported refusal to meet, which they describe as “a big slap in the face”. Government sources say there had been one informal approach to seek a meeting.
The Guardian reports that almost £600m of public money has already been spent buying up land and homes in northern England to make way for the HS2 rail line, in spite of the uncertainty surrounding the future of the Birmingham to Manchester section.
The paper says more than £150m has gone towards buying property on the eastern leg to Leeds, which was paused nearly two years ago. One local mayor in south Yorkshire tells the paper the purchases have caused huge uncertainty.
The Daily Mail leads on a poll it has commissioned, the results of which – according to the paper = show Rishi Sunak has a path to victory at the next general election, citing support support for the PM’s green agenda, his Rwanda migrant policy and that the respondents also want tax cuts and inheritance tax to be abolished.
The paper says these policies create “clear blue water” with Labour, suggesting the election’s a long way from a foregone conclusion. A thousand people took part in the poll, which was carried out in the last two days.
All departments will apparently be told to identify savings by reducing the number of routine tasks carried out by staff such as doctors and police officers. One example given by Mr Hunt is that teachers could use artificial intelligence to mark papers.
The chancellor has spoken to the Times ahead of the Tory Party conference
The front page of the Daily Mirror shows the school bus that overturnedon the M53 yesterday, along with a picture of the teenager who died in the crash, Jessica Baker.
The paper describes a horrific scene, with children jumping out of smashed windows in the immediate aftermath. One woman tells the Mirror her daughter was on another bus “by sheer luck” and will be getting “one hell of a hug when she gets home”.
The Guardian carries an ultimatum that has been made by the authorities in Paris: that a “bedbug crisis” in France must be tackled before next year’s Olympics. The paper says a wave of panic and disgust has spread across the country, with travellers sharing photos of the creatures on high speed rail lines, the Paris Metro and Charles de Gaulle airport.
They had disappeared from daily life in the 1950s, the Guardian explains, but are returning, with increased resistance to chemical treatments. There is a plea for a national taskforce, with one Paris politician warning “no-one is safe”.
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