A variety of stories lead Friday’s covers. The Daily Telegraph reports that the biggest bank in Great Britain, Lloyds, has “promised solidarity” with transgender staff after the ruling of the Supreme Court, a woman is defined by biological sex under the Law of Equality. Next to the main story there is a photo of the author of Harry Potter, JK Rowling, who enjoys a cocktail and a cigar on a yacht after the trial. “Everything is fine for JK,” is the underground line.
For the Daily Mail also splashes in the photo of Rowling “toast” the decision of the Supreme Court. The mail says that the ruling has put labor in “agitation”, since it says that the “party faces pressure to destroy gender laws.” He informs that Health Minister Karin Smyth could not answer directly when questioned on Thursday about whether trans people should be treated in the same hospital rooms as women.
The Times leads with the comments made by Baroness Falkner, president of the United Kingdom Equality and Human Rights Commission, to the BBC. She said that trans people should press for a “third space”, such as neutral and changing rooms after the decision of the Supreme Court. King and Queen Camilla attract attention as the main image after his appearance in Durham’s cathedral for Mark Maundy on Thursday.
In other news, the Donald Trump Guardian organizing the Italian Prime Minister at the White House on Thursday. The document says that Giorgia Meloni has presented himself as an intermediary between Washington and Europe in the midst of concern about the effect of Trump’s commercial policies. The Guardian’s principal focuses on a story that ministers are fighting to avoid a Backbench Labor rebellion in disability benefits cuts.
The Sun writes “Non-Fly throne” with an image of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and King Charles in the context of a drone. The story affirms that a non -frying area has been imposed on King’s Sandringham’s house for worried security services.
According to the Friday newspaper front, British negotiators are under “enormous pressure” to weave food and animal welfare standards to agree on an “imminent” commercial agreement with the United States. Farmers in the United States are eager to sell their beef, pork and chicken in the United Kingdom.
The widow Louise Shackleton shares “heartbreaking” details with the daily mirror of her last moments with her husband Anthony before her suicide assisted in Dignitas in Switzerland because she has girls to help change the law in the United Kingdom.
For the Daily Express, the reports of Glasgow experts that a new “revolutionary” weight of weight could be a “cheap” and “convenient” form to fight against type 2 diabetes. It says that the medicine could help patients “lose pounds without injections.”
Finally, The Daily Star presents an image of the Legend of the Cricket of England, Freddie Flintoff, who talks about his “life after the horror accident.” The document also leads with the latest in the strikes of Birmingham Bin with its headline “Not now Seeagulls”.
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