they re fully immunised against polio because the virus has been found in multiple sewage samples in london. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are sebastian payne, who s the whitehall editor at the financial times, and martin lipton, the chief sports reporter at the sun. welcome to you both, gentleman. lets her show you a few glimpses of the front pages. industrial action makes the lead in several papers. for the guardian, it s the news that tomorrow s train strike action by the rmt union is going ahead. he times main story is the 7% pay deal for merseyrail workers. it says bosses will face pressure from unions wanting similar settlements. the daily mirror takes a different tack saying that if borisjohnson wants to reduce inflationary pay rises, he should start with that of some industry bosses. the daily express chooses to lead on the chancellor s comments that increasing the state pension won t fuel inflation. th
of the amazon rainforest is that of the missing british journalist dom philips. it s understood he was identified using dental records. hello, and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are rosamund urwin, who s the media editor at the sunday times, and the writer and broadcaster mihir bose. tomorrow s front pages, starting with. as always on front and manage to all, come in at quite early. i wonder why that is. the times says the treasury has warned employers must be careful about giving big pay rises this year as it could help fuel increases in inflation. the telegraph also leads on the treasury s worries on wage rises as thousands of rail workers prepare to walk out on strike this week over a pay dispute. the ft says rising rates have hit global markets as investors worry about inflation and a slow recovery from the pandemic causing prolonged economic problems. the independent says refugees who cross the channel to reach the uk a
told by a retired us federaljudge that attempts to block the certification of the 2020 election results constituted a treacherous plan to steal american democracy. hi there, welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me arejoe mayes, uk government reporterfor bloomberg, and the broadcaster penny smith. hello, both of you, once more. thanks for staying with us. let s have another look at the front pages as we have them. the i newspaper leads on the rise in interest rates, as the bank of england warns price hikes could go as high as 11%. the paper claims ministers have ruled out tax cuts until 202a. the daily mail follows the same story, telling its readers to brace themselves as the pain of the big crunch looms. the guardian reports borisjohnson is considering scrapping the role of ethics adviser after lord geidt quit, saying the prime minister put him in an impossible and odious position. the ft pictures ukraine s president zelensky greeti
k-pop superstars bts have announced they re taking a break from playing together to concentrate on solo projects. it marks the first pause the band members have taken those are the latest headlines. hello, and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are kate maltby, who s a columnist at the i newspaper, and the times radio presenter calum macdonald. good evening to you both, we will chat in just a second. let s run you through the front of those newspapers. one story dominates the papers the government s attempt to send some asylum seekers to rwanda, and the court decisions which have grounded that first flight to kigali. the metro sums up the saga as something of a farce. the daily mail illustrates the story with a dramatic photo of a dinghy dwarfed by an oil tanker in the channel. the times headline highlights the last minute ruling from the european court of human rights. while the daily express leads on borisjohnson s anger at