Christmas market âcarnageâ and âReturn of the family doctorâ
The Daily Mail leads with a story on the attack at a Christmas market in the German city of Magdeburg. Graphic footage on social media shows the car driving at speed through a crowd. A suspect was arrested soon after.
The Guardian headlines on Rachel Reeves defending her approach as chancellor. It quotes her saying she âwonât gaslight voters over the economyâ, while accusing Reform UK of ânot having a clueâ, amid polls showing the party is growing in popularity.
The Mirror leads with Health Secretary Wes Streeting vowing to bring back family doctors in England as part of a âÂŁ889m extra boost to GP budgetsâ.
The Times reports that half a million people in the UK are now taking weight-loss injections purchased online because of to a slow rollout on the NHS.
The Financial Times leads with reports that Donald Trumpâs team has told European officials that he will demand that Nato member states raise defence spending to 5% of GDP. It also has a story on how toy retailers are increasingly focusing on teenagers and young adults as birth rates drop.
The Daily Star has the headline âWell this is awkwardâ after it was announced Lord Peter Mandelson is to be the next UK ambassador to the US. A top campaign adviser to Donald Trump called Mandelson â who has criticised in the US president-elect in the past â âan absolute moronâ.
The i reports the UKâs 10 worst-performing rail firms have been cancelling about 800 trains a day in the past year. It comes as widespread travel disruption is expected across the Christmas period.
The Daily Telegraph carries a story about children born under fertility treatment in the 1970s under the headline: âThe IVF pioneer, secret sperm donors and families torn apartâ.
The Daily Express says the King is feeling âpositiveâ as he gears up for full duties next year after his treatment for cancer.
And the Sun reports on how âfed upâ Prince Andrew is refusing to walk the late Queenâs corgi dogs. It comes in the week it was revealed he would not be attending the traditional Royal Family Christmas events following reports about past business dealings between him and a suspected Chinese spy.