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'Rayner on the Rampage' and 'My big sister Kate'

Daily Mail front page with "Rayner on the Rampage" as headline.
Concerns over government spending cuts lead a couple of front pages. The Daily Mail reports that Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner is "at war" with Sir Keir Starmer and Chancellor Rachel Reeves over plans to slash her department's budget. The paper says the housing secretary was involved in a "series of increasingly heated meetings", where Rayner reportedly complained "forcibly" over the possible reductions.
Guardian front page with headline: "Thousands could suffer as child poverty plan delayed"
The government's child poverty strategy has been postponed until at least the autumn, according to the Guardian's front page. The paper says the move risks making it more likely tens of thousands of children may fall into poverty, adding that the delay is over concerns from Treasury officials about the cost of scrapping the two-child benefit limit.
Times Front page with headline: "New mental health A&Es ‘will relieve NHS strain'"
But plans to open a network of mental health A&Es across the UK is the lead story in the Times, which says the specialist units will help "relieve pressure" on hospitals and emergency services. They will allow patients to walk into a much calmer environment than most wards, building on work of 10 NHS trusts who set up similar units already, according to the paper.
FT Weekend front page with headline "Trump threatens EU tariffs of 50%"
US President Donald Trump's threats to impose higher EU tariffs lead the FT Weekend, which notes the rate would more than double the levy proposed by the US president last month. The FT reports that the German economy could fall by 1.7% over three years, according to one analysis, adding that EU officials had been blindsided by the announcement on Friday.
Daily Mirror front page, with picture of smiling Kate Middleton and headline "My Big Sister Kate and Me".
The Daily Mirror has interviewed the brother of the Princess of Wales, James Middleton. He has told the paper about his special bond with Catherine and how she, alongside their other sister Pippa, had helped him cope with mental health problems. "They've seen me at my lowest. Sibling love is one of the most powerful bonds there is," he added.
Daily Telegraph front page with headline "Protester charged for mocking Hezbollah"
The Daily Telegraph reports on a Jewish protester being arrested after holding a cartoon mocking the killing of a former Hezbollah leader. The paper says the man, who held up a sign satirising the death of Hassan Nasrallah and other Hezbollah , was detained and charged last year after counter-demonstrating at a pro-Palestine march. Cartoonist Matt has a wry take on the Chagos Islands deal, drawing a man selling copies of "Keir Starmer: The Art of the Deal" with the caption: "The book is free and you'll receive £101 million for the next 99 years."
Daily Express front page. There's a picture of Sharkey and the headline: "Get Tested! Feargal's Cancer Shock".
Feargal Sharkey has given an interview to the Daily Express being diagnosed with and being treated for prostate cancer. The environmental campaigner and former rock star urges men to get checked for the disease, as his was discovered following an unrelated visit to the doctor about a sore throat. Sharkey also told the paper the issue had been "resolved" a year ago and he was doing "very well". He vowed to continue campaigning for clean rivers.
Sun front page with headline "'Exploited' Miss England Flees Miss World". It features pic of Magee with a sash, bouquet and tiara after winning miss England.
Miss England has quit the Miss World beauty pageant saying she felt exploited by the organisers, according to the Sun's reporting. The paper says Mila Magee leaving the contest in India was over disliking feeling "farmed out" to wealthy male sponsors, describing the competition as being "stuck in the past".
Daily Start front page with headline "It's not easy being orange". Trump's face has been edited on to a picture of Miss Piggy and the skin of the muppet character has been turned orange.
The Daily Star returns to the topic of Trump, reporting on a speech given by a certain very green frog puppet at a graduation ceremony for university students. In the speech, the Star reports, the beloved children's character "mocked orange manbaby Donald Trump".

The lead in the Times is the proposed expansion of a network of mental health emergency care units across England, which it says are "intended to relieve pressure on hospitals and emergency services". The paper quotes the NHS national director of mental health, Claire Murdoch, as saying that the units would be a "first port of call" for patients in crisis - and would reduce lengthy stays on mental health wards.

The Daily Telegraph reports that a Jewish protester was arrested by the Metropolitan Police for holding up a placard which "satirised a Hezbollah leader" during a pro-Palestinian rally last September.

The paper says it has seen footage of a police officer asking him repeatedly if he thought the image would offend "pro-Hezbollah" demonstrators and stir up racial hatred. The Telegraph adds the man's case is the latest in what it calls a "string of heavy-handed police responses to lawful expression". A spokesperson for the Met said the force would "attempt to learn lessons from the episode".

The Guardian leads with the delay to the publication of Labour's child poverty strategy, which it says may result in tens of thousands more children falling into poverty. The paper quotes a government source as saying that he believes the two-child benefit cap - which prevents parents from claiming universal credit or tax credit for more than two children - will eventually be dropped. But it says there are questions being raised inside Number 10 over the political benefits of scrapping it.

The Daily Mail is among a number of the papers to report that a new biography about Freddie Mercury, the late lead singer of the rock group Queen, had a secret daughter. The paper says her existence was only known to his closest circle of family and friends.

According to the Mail, she is now 48 and lives in Europe and had a very "loving" relationship with Mercury before he died in 1991. It reveals he gave her 17 volumes of his personal journals, which she has shared with the rock biographer Lesley-Ann Jones. She's written the new book called Love, Freddie, which will be published in September.

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