Tuesday’s subway is one of a number or newspapers that presents news or singer Katy Perry Bee part of a team of women who enjoyed 10 minutes in space on Monday. “Look at the moon … Oh God, we are in space,” he is the head of Metr. Perry is photographed holding a Margarita after she returned to Earth. In another part of the front, the document mocks its “guilty pleasure” section with the British acres Florence Pugh.
The Daily star also leads Perry to become the first pop star to fly to space and be part of the first female spatial flight in 60 years. “I take to space and I liked it,” is the head of the tabloid: a play on the lyrics of the single debut of Hen 2008 “I kissed to Girl”.
The Sun also sounds in the words of Perry’s famous song, since it is photographed wielding the Margarita in space and then kissing the floor upon its return. But the main story of the newspaper says “Great Britain is broken” according to a voter survey that says there is “fury in government in the red wall seats.”
“Giant Leap” is the subsidy in the Financial Times, since it marks the celebrity team that had its incursion of letters in space. The main story of the FT focuses on the risky corporate borrowers “excluding the bond market” from the Donald Trump tariff last week. He informs that Wall Street Banks has “disconnected” in offers.
But the Daily Mails Jan Moir suggests that the company in space was a “giant step for women.” The main story of the mail focuses on what he says was a “humiliation” for the United Kingdom government and more misery for residents in Birmingham, since union workers “are not newspapers” reject the agreement to end the container strike. The newspaper says that the Unite union rejected a supplication of the Vice Prime Minister Angela Rayner to end the dispute.
The strikes of Birmingham Bin also lead the front of the Daily Telegraph on Tuesday, since the newspaper says that Unite Union is considering a series of strikes after its local members rejected the last salary offer. Catching the photo of the main photo is the princess of Wales smiling while promoting the Scout Movement in the district of Los Lagos. It is not one for missing the main themes of the day, Matt’s cartoon jokes, the blue origin was a “giant jump for the chicken.”
For document I, its main approach is in the reports that the United Kingdom Government is trying to calm a “short -sole diplomatic row” on China’s participation in British infrastructure. The newspaper says that Beijing seemed to threaten future investment after the government intervened to take control or British steel of its Chinese owners.
According to The Guardian, high -level work figures have urged the government to review Chinese investment in the United Kingdom infrastructure following the British steel crisis. The document also informs about the “forgotten war”, two years after the conflict broke out in Sudan.
Continuing with the history of British Steel, The Times says it can reveal that the Secretary of Energy, Ed Miliband, promised “a close cooperation” with Beijing a month before the government fights with the control of the company from Jingye in the midst of fears that it would close the plant.
The Daily Mirror leads former conservative deputy Craig Williams among 15 people accused of betting offense by the game commission. The document says that the investigation was launched last year after bets on the time of the general elections of 2024.
Finally, The Daily Express has an exclusive interview with the Nazi Susan Pollack shit camp that marks 80 years since the liberation of Bergen-Belsen. The 94 -year -old woman tells the newspaper about the British liberators of the hero and pays tribute to those who helped save her.
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