What the papers say – December 10
The papers are led by Boris Johnson’s dinner with European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen in Brussels.
The papers are led by Boris Johnson’s dinner with European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen in Brussels.
The start of the UK’s mass Covid-19 vaccination programme features on many front pages on Wednesday, along with continuing discussion over Brexit.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s trip to Brussels to try to finalise a Brexit deal features on most of the nation’s front pages.
Developments on Brexit and the arrival of a coronavirus vaccine on British shores are among the stories making headlines on Monday.
The nation’s papers are led by the PM stepping in to take a direct role in Brexit negotiations.
Various developments around the coming Covid vaccination dominate the Friday front pages.
The UK becoming the first country in the world to approve a jab against Covid-19 dominates the nation’s papers.
The front pages are filled with developments after a bruising revolt against Boris Johnson’s strengthened tiered system of coronavirus restrictions.
Boris Johnson is expected to win a crucial vote on Tuesday but there are still significant rumblings of discontent in his party, according to the national papers.
The front pages are led by political machinations prior to a crucial vote in Westminster in which Boris Johnson will try to convince Conservative backbenchers to support the introduction of a new tier system.
The Government’s continuing battles over pandemic measures and revelations about Rishi Sunak’s family fortune are splashed across the nation’s front pages.
The announcement of where the most stringent coronavirus restrictions will apply in England takes many of Friday’s front pages.
Fallout from Chancellor Rishi Sunak’s spending review and the death of Diego Maradona lead Thursday’s papers.
Wednesday’s front pages are dominated by the Government’s announcement that coronavirus restrictions will be relaxed for the festive period.
The coronavirus continues to make headlines, with the new tiered plan dominating the papers along with details of the latest Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine trial.
Christmas is splashed across the front pages after the Cabinet Office said multiple households will be able to bubble up in late December ahead of a statement from Boris Johnson on new Covid measures.
More developments on the coronavirus front lead many of the Saturday papers, from reports of regulations easing over Christmas to vaccine deployment.
Hopes for a clinical solution to the pandemic and a public sector pay freeze dominate the front pages.
The personal and economic prices of coronavirus, as well as William’s words on his mother’s Panorama interview, fill the national papers.
Boris Johnson setting out a 10-point plan for a “green industrial revolution” features among the stories on the nation’s front pages.
Another coronavirus vaccine takes many of the headlines in Tuesday’s papers with US drug company Moderna saying their jab is 94.5% effective.
Lewis Hamilton’s seventh Formula One world championship, the death of Des O’Connor and news of Boris Johnson being forced into isolation are among the headlines on Monday.
The departure of Dominic Cummings from Number 10 appears on many of the front pages as the weekend begins.
Issues at 10 Downing Street continue to make headlines on Friday, with rumours surrounding the future of Dominic Cummings appearing on many front pages.
Movements at 10 Downing Street are among the stories leading Thursday’s papers after senior adviser Lee Cain said he was leaving as director of communications, while developments on the coronavirus vaccine also feature.
Developments on a potential coronavirus vaccine lead many of the Wednesday papers as more details come to light about its deployment in the UK.
Developments in the race for a coronavirus vaccine lead many of Tuesday’s papers after Pfizer and BioNTech announced success in a recent round of trials.
The US election continues to make headlines on Monday, while many papers carry pictures of the Queen on Remembrance Sunday.
The US election continues to dominate the nation’s front pages, with Joe Biden on the verge of taking the White House.
The race is still on across the Atlantic and across the UK’s front pages.