“Council housing revolution” was the headline in the Sunday Mirror. He said Labor will open plans there for the council’s largest building program and affordable housing in decades. The newspaper’s editorial said the party had “the right to do whatever it takes to create a decent roof for all those in need”. Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner told the Observer that “local leaders know their areas best” will be the key to submitting a proposal.
Sunday Express has a positive assessment of Dame Priti Patel’s offer to be the next leader of the Conservatives. The newspaper said the former home secretary had “made a strong case” for bringing the party together so it could focus on issues that mattered to voters. The Sun on Sunday has spoken to an insider with knowledge of the other leader’s campaign. He said Robert Jenrick would offer “the politics of Nigel Farage with the presentation of David Cameron”, when he delivered his keynote speech this week.
The Sunday Telegraph says Sir Keir Starmer has discuss the possibility of a deal on the free movement of young people with the Prime Minister of Spain, Pedro Sánchez. A government source cautions against over-interpreting Sir Keir’s openness to the idea – saying he may have just been polite when meeting the leader for the first time.
Pat McFadden, a senior member of Sir Keir’s cabinet, has been written in the Sunday Telegraph ahead of the Treasury’s statement on the health of public finances on Monday. He said one of his first acts as head of the Cabinet Office was to get a “comprehensive analysis” of the country’s government departments. Mr McFadden told the paper he found “announcements without proper funding” and “long-term spending pressures without a serious plan to deal with them”. But Mail on Sunday called the government “dishonest”. He said Labour’s claim that he did not know the true state of the national accounts before taking office was “quite astonishing”.
Observers say former Strictly Come Dancing production staff have complain about a “toxic” work culture., in what he called a “fresh breath” for the show. Former crew members have accused the BBC of not taking the complaints seriously. The company said it was not aware of any claims related to a negative workplace culture.
The Sunday Times has it First interview with British tech tycoon Mike Lynch since returning from the US, where he spent 13 months under house arrest. A court in California cleared him of fraud and conspiracy charges related to the sale of the software company to technology giant Hewlett-Packard. He called for a review of the extradition treaty between the United States and Britain, which critics say is one of them. The newspaper said he was “put in chains” and placed in the back row of a passenger plane, when he was handed over to US marshals at Heathrow Airport.
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