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Newspaper headlines: 'Anger as fans boo William' and 'Rishi ready to help'

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Liverpool triumph after another Wembley penalty shootout against Chelsea

The Sunday Telegraph reports that for failing to keep inflation at the target rate of 2%. Senior ministers are quoted as saying the Bank had "one job".

In its leader column, the Telegraph calls on the chancellor and the prime minister "to bury their differences" and work together to bring down taxes and rein in public spending to fight inflation.

Writing in the Sunday Express, Rishi Sunak promises to do "everything in his power" to help people with the cost of living crisis.

A Tory backbencher tells the paper that Conservative MPs are expecting an "emergency budget in all but name".

Ahead of Boris Johnson's trip to Northern Ireland with the aim of easing tensions over post-Brexit trade, the Sun on Sunday stresses that

The Sunday Times suggests there's at Ms Truss' stance on relations with the EU.

In its analysis, the Observer suggests that there's growing evidence that Northern Ireland is starting to profit from the current trading arrangements, making calls to slash the protocol "bogus".

Leaked government documents in The Observer warn that and "pose a risk to life". Officials in the Department for Education are reported to be demanding billions extra from the Treasury to help rebuild schools.

A government spokesperson said it had invested more than £11bn in the past seven years on improving school buildings.

The former health secretary, Jeremy Hunt, calls in the Sunday Times for

He insists it leads to avoidable deaths in England. In a new book, which is serialised in the paper, Mr Hunt said he was "shocked to his core" by failures in care.

According to the Sunday Mirror, since last October - despite this being banned 12 years ago.

The Patients Association calls it "an affront" to people's dignity.

On its front page, the Sun reports that four months after she was reported missing.

The paper says his jaw was reset and his teeth straightened. The Sun suggests he will face charges later this year.

The is the main story in the Sydney Morning Herald.

Its online news site describes the cricket world as being in mourning in what it calls "a devastating year" for the sport after the deaths of Rod Marsh and Shane Warne. The former Australian captain, Mark Taylor, said Symonds "hit the ball a long way and just wanted to entertain".

Liverpool's FA Cup victory is celebrated on many front pages. "Their cups runneth over..." says the Telegraph headline as the Reds lift their second trophy of the season.

The Mail on Sunday focuses on , which has been condemned by MPs.

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Rap-folk band Kalush Orchestra were given special permission to leave war-torn Ukraine to compete in Eurovision

The Eurovision Song Contest finished after the newspapers were printed. Online, the Daily Star suggests saying the Kalush Orchestra "stole the hearts of half the globe".

The Mail Online describes it as . The Times concludes that , adding that it might have been a UK win "in any other year".

But the Telegraph calls . The Sun says .