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Newspaper headlines: 'Paparazzi car chase' and '£10bn for sewage spills'

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Sir Keir Starmer makes a speechImage source, PA Media
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Sir Keir insists looking at the UK's Brexit deal doesn't mean going back into the EU, but getting "a better deal"

says the prime minister has been accused of "being out of touch with ordinary families" after claiming that the economy is looking up and people's household incomes are "hugely outperforming" expectations despite the high cost of living. The paper reports that - on a flight to the G7 summit in Japan - Rishi Sunak said there were "lots of signs that things are moving in the right direction" with the economy. The story quotes Labour's Treasury spokesperson, James Murray, as saying: "almost every word that comes out of the prime minister's mouth shows how utterly out of touch he is and disconnected from the reality of life for working people".

The front page of also focuses on Rishi Sunak, saying he has raised "the hope of tax cuts before the election". It reports that the prime minister has said that he will ease the burden on working Britons once inflation comes down and the government gets a grip on borrowing.

"Now the Starmer mask slips on Brexit" is the headline in . The paper says the Labour leader "sparked outrage" last night by saying he would try to renegotiate the Brexit deal if he wins power. Sir Keir has insisted that doesn't mean going back into the EU, but getting "a better deal".

reports that German carmakers want a delay in Brexit rules on tariff-free access to UK. It comes after the owner of Vauxhall called for the UK government to renegotiate the Brexit trade deal, because of concerns that rules on electric vehicle batteries could threaten future production here. The FT says German companies are worried that Europe's battery ind­ustry hasn't developed fast enough and tariffs would be "a significant competitive disadvantage" for the European car industry in the UK market.

"Hospital Horror" reads the front of . The paper reports that 19 people are being investigated by police following the deaths of hundreds of patients who'd been given "opioid drugs" at a hospital in Hampshire. It says the Kent and Essex Serious Crime Directorate is reviewing the records of more than 750 patients treated at the Gosport Memorial Hospital in the late 1980s to the early 2000s.

leads with what it calls the "Massive cost of obesity to the NHS". It says a study - which tracked 2.8 million people for a decade - shows the heaviest patients require £1400 of spending a year - twice the total for people of a "healthy weight". also carries the story on its front page. It quotes experts as saying the research proves that economic prosperity and the viability of the NHS depends on tackling rising obesity, which is driving record levels of long-term sickness.

Image source, Reuters
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King Charles and Queen Camilla arrived earlier than planned for the Coronation

Finally, says it has the answer as to why King Charles and Queen Camilla had a short wait outside Westminster Abbey - after arriving earlier than planned for the Coronation. A military source has told the paper it was the fault of the horses pulling the carriage from Buckingham Palace. The source claims the horses were more "wide awake", and therefore quicker, on the morning of the Coronation than they had been during the dress rehearsal, which took place in the middle of the night.