iBet uBet web content aggregator. Adding the entire web to your favor.
iBet uBet web content aggregator. Adding the entire web to your favor.



Link to original content: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cvg7ymmgnn1o
Newspaper headlines: 'Budget put us off hiring' and 'Cabinet assisted dying split' - BBC News

'Budget will put us off hiring' and 'Cabinet assisted dying split'

  • Published

Image caption,

The ongoing fallout from the Budget leads several front pages. The Times reports on business leaders warning that the rise in employer's national insurance will put them off hiring new employees. The paper says a survey of employers suggests half of the UK's firms are looking to reduce their headcount since the £25 billion tax rise was announced.

Image caption,

The Guardian features a preview of upcoming remarks by Chancellor Rachel Reeves, who is to "rebuke critics of her tax-raising budget" on Monday. The paper says she is due to address "disgruntled business leaders" and tell them that no one has suggested an alternative course of action for the government.

Image caption,

The i leads with reporting on a split in the cabinet over Friday's assisted dying vote. The paper notes 14 cabinet ministers support the bill, with eight of their colleagues - including Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood and Health Secretary Wes Streeting - opposed. It notes Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has previously backed the policy, but is now said to be reading the bill "line by line".

Image caption,

Campaigner Dame Esther Rantzen has called on MPs to change the "cruel, messy criminal law" on assisted dying in England and Wales, according to the Daily Express. The paper notes that four recent polls have suggested "overwhelming support for the right to choose" among the public.

Image caption,

The Daily Mail leads with an exclusive on claims that the head of the GMB union has become "embroiled in allegations of harassing and bullying women". The paper says Gary Smith - who it says endorsed Starmer's 2020 bid for Labour leader - was "allowed to run for the role despite" the bullying allegations. Mr Smith did not provide a comment for the paper, while GMB denied it had a "bullying culture" at union.

Image caption,

The Metro has dedicated its front page to its campaign against the "epidemic" of violence against women and girls. The paper reports that every 11 minutes on average a woman or girl is killed in their own homes globally, as well as noting there has been a 37% increase in crimes committed against them in the UK between 2018 and 2023.

Image caption,

The Daily Telegraph has a report on calls by a former Metropolitan Police chief for a review of how forces respond to non-crime hate incidents. Lord Hogan-Howe was responding to a conservative think tank report which has urged ministers to stop police recording these incidents to save officers time. The former Met boss went one step further, suggesting the government should consider whether officers should not be investigating them at all.

Image caption,

The Daily Mirror leads with a story about a woman who almost died after having a "botched" Brazilian butt lift. Bonnie-Louise Cooper described the plastic surgery industry as "madness", with the paper also reporting that the Royal College of Surgeons has backed its campaign for more regulation.

Image caption,

US retailers are keeping their Black Friday and other seasonal discount offers in place for longer in a bid to encourage consumers, according to the Financial Times. The paper says despite the cheaper offerings, general retail sales in the US are down 3 points since this time last year.

Image caption,

England football legend Bobby Moore's missing 1966 World Cup shirt has been "tracked to Wales", according to the Sun's front page splash. The red number six top is worth more than a million pounds, with the paper reporting that "Britain's biggest collector of memorabilia" is now claiming to have it in his hands.

Image caption,

Under the headline "Five Storms by Xmas", the Daily Star reports that we're facing a dire December weather-wise. The paper says forecasters have predicted "five more snowy storm blasts" while the festive season kicks in.

"Under siege," declares the Times, which carries a large front page photo of a flooded street in Pontypridd, in south Wales.

Partly-submerged vehicles are trapped along what the paper says is now a "waterway", after Storm Bert swept in, external.

The Guardian, external and the Daily Telegraph, external both feature the same photo of a rain-soaked woman, battling to keep floodwater from a house in Kingsteignton, in Devon.

The Daily Star warns that "Bert was just the start", with forecasters predicting five more storm blasts before Christmas - the next as soon as this coming weekend.

The Daily Express carries a front page appeal by Dame Esther Rantzen, external, who is terminally ill with advanced lung cancer, for MPs to change what she calls the “cruel, messy, criminal law” on assisted dying.

The paper says "the people have spoken". It points to four recent opinion polls - including one commissioned by the Express - which it says have shown "there is overwhelming support for the right to choose".

The i reports that there's a "cabinet split" over assisted dying, external, adding that the row over the vote on Friday is deepening. It says 14 Cabinet ministers support the bill, but eight - including Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood, and the health secretary, Wes Streeting, oppose it.

The Metro features its own campaign to end what it calls the "epidemic" of violence against women and girls. According to the paper, more than one hundred women a year are killed by men in the UK - while around the world, a woman or girl is killed in their own home every 11 minutes.

The Daily Mail leads with claims of bullying at the GMB union, external - which has close links to Labour - and allegations that members' subs are "used like confetti" to fight complaints. The paper says the general secretary, Gary Smith and the Labour party were approached for comment, but did not respond. A spokesman for the GMB categorically denied claims of a "bullying culture" at union.

The Daily Telegraph reports that the former Metropolitan Police commissioner, Lord Hogan-Howe, wants ministers to review the use of non-crime hate incidents by forces., external He was responding to findings by the Policy Exchange think tank - that police are spending up to 60,000 hours a year on such cases, rather than fighting crime.

Lord Hogan-Howe tells the Telegraph that the government should study the report, and consider whether police should be investigating the incidents at all.

And the missing football shirt - famously worn by England's World Cup winning skipper, Bobby Moore - has been "tracked down to Wales," according to the Sun, external. The paper says the red number 6 jersey was last seen at his ex-wife's home in Essex, 30 years ago. Bobby Moore wore the shirt as he lifted the Jules Rimet Trophy, at Wembley, in 1996. The jersey is now said to be worth more than a million pounds.

Sign up for our morning newsletter and get BBC News in your inbox.