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The papers: 'Trump and Musk - babies at war' and 'DIY Ozempic boom' The papers: 'Trump and Musk - babies at war' and 'DIY Ozempic boom'
(1 day later)
The row between Donald Trump and Elon Musk is on many of the front pages. The Financial Times headline says the pair have been urged to "hug and make up". The Mirror calls it "babies at war". The Express says Mr Trump has "met his match". In its cartoon, "i" Weekend portrays Mr Trump and Mr Musk in opposing corners of a boxing ring. The men are sitting on stools, typing furiously into smartphones, their discarded boxing gloves laying between them. The caption reads "the gloves are off!".
Allies of Trump and Musk are urging the two to mend their relationship, reports the Financial Times, to try to limit political and commercial damage The Times claims that the NHS will receive significant additional funding in Wednesday's spending review. It says the £30 billion increase will lead to "painful compromises" for other departments, and reports of concerns from health bosses that it might not be enough to reduce patient waiting times significantly.
Their rancour is inspiring plenty of headlines - with the Daily Mirror weighing in on the 'babies at war', noting 'the egos have landed' and flagging Musk's accusation linking Trump to Jeffrey Epstein In Scotland, the National has spoken to SNP activists who say their internal concerns about the party's approach to fighting Reform UK at the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse were ignored.
The Daily Star is going with a story about "bitter ex first buddy" Musk reportedly taking his SpaceX landing pod away from Trump - which the paper claims will leave some Nasa astronauts stranded in space The Daily Telegraph says it's seen official training documents which say that concern about mass migration is a terrorist ideology, which may require a referral to the government's anti-radicalisation Prevent programme. In its editorial, the paper muses whether or not Sir Keir Starmer could be classed as a "dangerous right wing extremist" based on the definition. A Home Office spokesman tells the paper that Prevent isn't about restricting free speech - but about protecting people from radicalisation.
Meanwhile the Daily Mail focuses on an investigation into the "booming black market" of cheap DIY Ozempic reportedly being sold across the UK "Russia is at war with us", says Fiona Hill, the former White House chief adviser on the country, in an interview with The Guardian. She cites "the poisonings, assassinations, sabotage operations, all kinds of cyber attacks and influence operations. "We're in pretty big trouble," she says.
The Times leads with a story that the PM will boost the NHS with £30bn extra funding at the expense of other public services including police and councils The Sun has seen a note said to have been written by the prime suspect in the disappearance of Madeleine McCann. Christian Bruekner writes that what he calls decisive questions in the case can never be answered. In the undated letter he says "is there a body? No, no, no."
Meanwhile the Daily Express features opposition leader Kemi Badenoch's claims that the UK is becoming a "soft touch" on asylum The Daily Mail reports that social media sites are being used to sell cut-price weight loss drugs, which people have to mix with other substances themselves. Its investigation says the cheap treatments put lives at risk.
The prime suspect in the Madeleine McCann case has gloated that police will never pin the case on him without a body, according to the Sun, citing a letter. Brueckner has previously denied through his lawyers any involvement in the child's disappearance
The Daily Telegraph reports that an online training course for the national deradicalization programme Prevent lists "cultural nationalism" as a belief that could lead to a person being referred. It also features a picture of tennis player Katie Boulter, who says she receives abuse every time her boyfriend, fellow tennis player Alex de Minaur, loses
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