Rights reform to ‘head off Farage’ and ‘Enders Jamie axed’
Serpinti, the resignation of Angela Rayner and the reorganization of the resulting cabinet, leads many of the newspapers on Sunday. On the front page of the observer, there are a number of articles analyzing Rayner’s influence on the Labor Party. “Who is talking about the left now?” Kimia Zabihyan asks Andrew Rawnsley while writing: “Angela Rayner had a pure class. Our class.”
According to Sunday Telegraph, new Interior Minister Shabana Mahmood will soon plan to move immigrants to old military bases in hotels looking for asylum. The policy will be introduced “in weeks” and the Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer instructs him to “get a comprehension” in the crisis of small boats.
Sunday Times is ready to “overhaul the laws of human rights to cope with Labour’s new cabinet migration. A party tells the article to the article for Shabana Mahmood, who wants to reform the European Convention on Human Rights, “there is nothing outside the table”.
Former Prime Minister Boris Johnson and reform British leader Nigel Farage, Nadine Dorries, who managed to reform England, one of the conservatives last week. “Both men would have found a way to host each other’s egos,” he says if he could make people’s lives better.
According to Sunday Express, HMRC officials, who cannot get the phone, lead to an annual loss of £ 46.8 billion in tax revenue. If the lost income is collected for “wearing a black hole in public finances”, tax hikes will be unnecessary by the chancellor.
The Sun reported that Jamie Borthwick was undermining Jay Brown with soap about twenty years later. Earlier this year, he was definitely suspended after using a slurry against disabled people on the Come Dancing set.
“Enders Jamie Axed” is the title for the market mirror that leads the BBC bosses who say that the BBC bosses are in the Albert Square “.
According to MP Lee Anderson, children will say the King Rescue and Wave Union Jack flags every morning under the government of British. Daily Star reports that Ashfield deputy believes that young people should “teach what it means to be British”.