What the papers say – March 9
The fallout from Harry and Meghan’s explosive TV interview gains saturation coverage in the nation’s papers.
The fallout from Harry and Meghan’s explosive TV interview gains saturation coverage in the nation’s papers.
All but two mainstream national dailies carry front page angles on the Duke and Duchess of Sussex’s Oprah interview, while warnings over the reopening of schools and news on Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe also feature.
Fury over a small pay rise for NHS staff, the prospect of summer holidays and the latest with the coronavirus vaccine feature on Friday’s front pages.
Reaction to Rishi Sunak’s Budget and a Buckingham Palace inquiry into bullying claims are among the stories making the front pages on Thursday.
News about the Budget and its expected furlough measures dominates the nation’s papers on Wednesday.
The nation’s papers are led by Philip being moved to a new hospital for treatment on an infection and a pre-existing heart condition.
The emergence of the new Brazilian coronavirus variant in the UK and previews of this week’s Budget dominate the nation’s papers.
An entreaty for vaccinations from the monarch and problems for the NHS lead the papers.
The Government’s plan to avoid a repeat of last year’s exams fiasco in England is splashed across many of the front pages.
Rising hopes for an early end to lockdown and golf star Tiger Woods’s car crash dominate the Wednesday papers.
The Prime Minister’s four-step plan to fully ease lockdown is keenly anticipated in the papers, though there is some criticism over its duration.
The front pages splash with the planned return of schools, socialising and some sports next month as part of the easing of coronavirus restrictions.
Plans to ease coronavirus restrictions lead several of the nation’s papers along with the latest on the vaccine rollout.
Vaccines and the chance of an escape from lockdown are splashed across the front pages on Friday.
Hotel quarantine and the continuing rollout of Covid vaccines are among the stories on the front pages on Friday.
Britain passing a coronavirus peak, the vaccination latest and continuing tributes to Captain Sir Tom Moore feature on Thursday’s front pages.
The death of Captain Sir Tom Moore at the age of 100 features on many of Wednesday’s front pages along with a study suggesting the Oxford vaccine may reduce transmission of Covid-19.
Concerns over the South African variant of Covid-19 and the proposed return to the classroom are among the stories making the front pages on Tuesday.
Captain Sir Tom Moore’s treatment for coronavirus in hospital is splashed across many of the papers, alongside stories of the UK’s continuing vaccine rollout.
Diplomatic tensions and the development of a fourth Covid-19 vaccine for use in Britain are splashed throughout the national papers.
Vaccine politics and alternative testing methods are spread across Thursday’s front pages.
Most of the papers carry the Prime Minister’s announcement he was “deeply sorry” as Government figures showed more than 100,000 people in the UK had died after contracting coronavirus.
Vaccination differences and arrested holiday plans fill Tuesday’s front pages.
Schooling and vaccination dominate the front pages at the start of the week.
The nation’s front pages are dominated by a reported proposal to give everyone in England who tests positive for Covid-19 £500 to boost quarantine compliance.
The owner of the Daily Mail said that the revenue it made from selling newspapers dropped 2% in the first three months of the financial year.
The papers are dominated by the swearing-in of Joe Biden as the 46th president of the United States.
The papers are dominated by the looming inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden.
Developments with England’s vaccination efforts and concerns over smart motorways lead the nation’s papers.
The papers are led by the expansion of the Government’s coronavirus vaccination programme to include millions of over 70s and the clinically extremely vulnerable.