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‘The great Rayner reshuffle’ and ‘Nightmare on Downing Street’

The title on the front page of Times reads: "Great Rayner Re -Settlement".

Every article on Saturday morning leads to the resignation of Angela Rayner – after not paying enough stamp tax to his apartment in Hove – and the jolt of the ministry triggered. Times reads “Great Rayner Rebuffle” and reports Sir Keir Starmer’s new cabinet appointments while trying to “overhave the best team”.

The title on the front page of the Daily Mail reads: "Downing Street Nightmare".

Daily Mail calls it a nightmare in Downing Street. ” This article says that he was appointed as an external secretary after Yette Cooper’s position in the home office “after” unable to fight the crisis of small boats “. Former Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood will take Cooper’s previous position.

The title on the front page of the I paper reads: "Rayner is losing his job - as he told Mahmood to stop the boat immigrants".

I Weekend says that the new Interior Minister Shabana Mahmood is a “rising star” in the Labor Party, and that immigrants and “Slow Nigel Farage’s momentum” is “established to get a harder line” on the “more harsh line”.

The title on the front page of Telegraph reads: "Get out of Rayner, now Starmer takes the fight against reform".

“The exit Rayner is now struggling with Starmer reform” He reads the title of Daily Telegraph and imagines MPs Pat Mcfadden and Ed Miliband, as well as a view of Rayner. According to the article, while Miliband protected his mission as a net zero secretary, McFadden was given a new “super charge” department to focus on “growth, benefits, pension and skill briefings”.

The title on the front page of the Financial Times says: "Starmer raises his cabinet after resigning over the Rayner Tax Scandal".

“Starmer raises his cabinet after resigning through the Rayner Tax Scandal,” Financial Times says. The article says to the reorganization “Great Gambling” and says that the move of 11 ministers to new roles will show questions about whether they will perform better after the change.

The title on the front page of Guardian reads: "PM battles that will include crisis after Rayner had to resign".

“Prime Minister wars in a crisis,” says The Guardian, the Serpinti from the discussion, “Labor’un reputation more likely to damage” writes. On the front page, it contains an excerpt from Rayner’s resignation letter and “It was the greatest honor of my life to work in the highest -level government for a young mother from a council land.”

The title on the front page of the mirror reads: "Stamp tax 'hypocritical'".

Mirror brands, if it had not been purchased by his wife, claiming that he would have to pay additional stamp tax for a house in Clacton, a “stamp tax ‘hypocritical’ a” stamp tax ‘hypocritical “reform.

The title on the front page of Express reads: "They are not suitable for management".

Farage says the Labor Party is not “suitable for management”, a quote carried by the front page of Daily Express. The article writes that the reform called the British leaders’ voters “Sir Keir Starmer’s government to kick the government from NO10” and promised to “save England”.

The title on the front page of the star reads: "Rayn is over".

“Rayn’s Over” labels later on the Star’s Saturday edition as a “government melting” and “Frontbench turmoil”.

Title on the front page of the sun: "Batik".

“Batt” declares the sun with a photo of Rayner on a swelling boat on the front page.

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