A red poppy features on every front page this morning, with many papers running a Special Edition for Reminder Sunday. Catherine, princess of Wales, opposite and center of the Express, Photographh wearing a poppy with Prince George at the Royal Albert Hall. The paper led an exclusive story detailing the Ministry of Defense’s announcement that they would cover the costs of veterans making overseas trips.
In the Sunday edition of the mirror, the paper detailed its own “campaign campaign”, which they say will see an additional veterans “involved in a nuclear nuclear test.
Television Presenter Davina McCall was featured on the front page of the day, after she revealed on Instagram that she had been diagnosed with breast cancer. McCall, 58, said he found a heavy one a few weeks ago. She was urged to get it checked after seeing Lorraine Kelly’s makeover posters urging women to “check your breasts”.
MCCALL “got ‘True-dali’ after converting the diagnosis” said the star, noting that the celebrity said that he did not need chemotherapy following the removal of the damaged rice in his chest.
The Observer’s political editor Rachel Sylvester has commented on how Chancellor Rachel Reeves’s “two up, two down” budget could affect young people in the UK, leading with the headline “Generation game”.
“BBC to say sorry for telling Doctor Trump” read the headline of Sunday’s Telegraph Party at the World Culture Party
The hours lead with a similar headline: “The BBC’s request for speech on Doctoring Trump”. Newman’s new cartoon delights in the false releases of prisoners, depicting prison guards looking at a calendar of arrivals at all the doors”.
Former prime minister Boris Johnson condemned BBC Presenter Nick Robinson for “taking a biased anti-BBC line in Sunday’s reports. Speaking on radio 4’s flagship current program on Saturday, Robinson said there was a “real concern about editorial standards but there was also a “political campaign by people who want to destroy the organisation”. Johnson called Robinson’s remarks “ridiculous” and “arrogant”.