actress and singer, dame olivia newton john, star of grease has died of cancer at the age of 73. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are are sonia sodah, who s the chief leader writer for the observer, and geri scott, political reporter at the times. tomorrow s front pages, starting with. tomorrow s front pages starting with the metro. the trial of the manchester united player with a and coercive behaviour. the same lead that the scraps is actions as rage. liz truss on the front of the eye, more help on the cost of living. guardian says plans put forward by liz truss to cut taxes would cost over £50 billion a year. within the £30 billion a year she has claimed. comments from dominic raab supports rishi sunak sing failure to offer more help on the cost of living would be an electoral suicide. focusing on the weather, the se be the driest year since 1976 and the bands could be in place until october. the daily mail talk
as prime minister. tom tugenhadt was eliminated in the latest round of voting. of the remaing four, former chancellor rishi sunak tops the polls followed by penny mourdant. hello, welcome to our second and last look of the night hello, welcome to our second and last look of the night of hello, welcome to our second and last look of the night of what hello, welcome to our second and last look of the night of what the papers will be bringing us on tuesday morning. still with me, baroness ros altman and james rampton, features writer at the independent. welcome back to both of you. i m hoping you had something long and cool in the interim. the high temperatures dominate the front pages. the i leads with a stark map showing the high temperatures reached in britain today and the headline earth sends a warning. the telegraph is concerned that emergency services may not be able to cope if the hot weather continues for a second day tomorrow. the online independent newspaper repor
they also say ministers are groping for answers on whether the prime minister was aware of the chris pincher allegations. tory rebels tell the times the way borisjohnson responded to the claims means he is more likely to lose support within the 1922 committee. the same story features on the telegraph, who report the prime minister is facing a cabinet backlash over how he has handled the allegations. the mirror reports labour have blasted the pm for saying chris pincher did the decent thing by resigning as deputy chief whip. in the guardian, half of all children in single parent families are now living in relative poverty. and a tribute to theatre director peter brook, who died today aged 97. people are waiting a record four months to buy a house due to what the daily express describes as a broken housing market. and finally, the daily mail reports more than 22,000 crime suspects are on the loose after failing to appear in court, whilst officers are too busy to arrest
their first ever major tournament. welcome to bbc news, broadcasting to viewers in the uk and around the world. our top story for you today: scientists say there s compelling evidence that a market selling live animals in the chinese city of wuhan was the early epicentre of the covid 19 pandemic. it s a significant contribution to what s always been the dominant theory that the outbreak began with the coronavirus spreading from animals to humans at the so called wet market . this is the seafood wholesale market in wuhan. one of the studies just published in the journal science says genetic information suggests there were two crossover events where animals infected humans in late 2019. a second study also in science shows the earliest known cases in the city were clustered, around that market. i spoke to dr michael worobey, one of the lead authors of that study and professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at the university of arizona. he took us through the resea