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Newspaper headlines: Hunt tax cuts warning and 'from Friend to Traitor'

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Image source, Reuters

"Get him back" is the headline in the, demanding his suspension is lifted. It reports that party whips have been "besieged" with support for him, with some saying he must be reinstated before the election because of his "incredible popularity" with voters.

According to despite Rishi Sunak's attempts to "close down the row". from members of one grassroots Conservative group, which describe the prime minister as a "snake" who is "weak and feeble".

According to It says Jeremy Hunt "is still clinging to hope" that he can cut 2p off personal taxes in the Budget next week, without having to reduce spending. by one percentage point and introducing a new levy on vaping.

that pro-Palestinian marches are placing "unsustainable" pressure on policing resources. The headline in In its leader column, it says the protests are "crippling the police". But the

An investigation by over naked photographs has risen by 390% in two years. Experts tell the paper that up to 100 children a day are falling victim to what they call "sextortion" scams. It highlights the story of one 16-year-old victim, who took his own life after receiving threats.

. It says the Ministry of Defence was "taken aback by the scale of the anger" about the plans to allocate accommodation according to family size, rather than rank. A government source tells the paper that just 69 people were originally interviewed about the scheme, but says more research will now be conducted.

as "one of the biggest geopolitical consequences" of the invasion of Ukraine. It says the accessions of both Sweden and Finland give the alliance "control of almost the entire Baltic Sea", doubling the length of its border with Russia.

In an interview with . She says she would help to train young male mentors to provide "a powerful counterbalance" to social media influencers, such as Andrew Tate, a self-proclaimed misogynist.

And has been raised from U to PG, because it features a colonial term used by white Europeans in South Africa. The paper proclaims that the move has "upstaged" what it considers "the only jarring element of the film": "Dick van Dyke's notorious assault on the Cockney accent".

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