Newspaper headlines: Lineker 'chaos' pressures ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ chiefs and asylum plan

  • Author, ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ News
  • Role, Staff

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A "day of unprecedented drama", is after Gary Lineker was taken off air. The paper says TV and radio schedules were ripped up because other presenters and pundits refused to go on shows. The Mail calls what happened an "astonishing staff mutiny".

left "ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ bosses battling to fill the schedule". There was no Football Focus or Final Score on ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ One, episodes of Bargain Hunt and the Repair Shop were shown instead.

at the corporation as Gary Lineker was suspended. One staff member has described the situation as "so farcical" it would not even be believable as a plotline for the mockumentary series, W1A. Potential stand-in hosts for Match of the Day feared being seen as a "scab", while according to one source, of those not wise enough to say "no" to the gig, their agents did it for them.

The issue that sparked the row about Gary Lineker - the government's new asylum policy - ahead of the proposals being debated by MPs on Monday. The paper reports that the former ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Secretary Priti Patel is considering a "potentially explosive intervention" about what the bill means for the detention of children.

the Labour peer, Baroness Lister, predicts many in the House of Lords will reject the legislation as "cruel and inhumane".

The immigration minister, Robert Jenrick, acknowledges the plans are "tough", but .

The Scottish Mail on Sunday reports that nearly 50,000 members have abandoned the SNP in the past three years. The party used to have 125,000 members in 2019. But 78,000 names have been sent to the polling company running the ballot to elect a new SNP leader and first minister of Scotland. The Mail says just 54,000 are expected to submit a vote. The SNP has refused to confirm exact numbers.

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex's children, Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet, have not been invited to the Kings coronation in May, .

The children are aged three and one. Prince Harry and Meghan are said to be still "weighing up" whether to go to Westminster Abbey. If they do turn up, that the Sussexes are likely to get "the cold shoulder" because many of their relatives want nothing more to do with them.

as it reports on the takeover of the pasty company Proper Cornish by a French snacks firm.

Groupe Boncolac has told there will be no change to the delicacy. But fans are not convinced.

"They won't be the same", while another suggested people could soon be tucking into tender frog's leg alongside the traditional swede, onion and potato.