‘Burnham election call’ and ‘Too hot for tennis’

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‘Burnham election call’ and ‘Too hot for tennis’

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The headline on the front page of the i Weekend reads: "The Burnham bounce: Labour leapfrogs Reform with new leader."
The headline on the front page of the Independent reads: "Britain must rejoin single market within five years, says Major."
The headline on the front page of the Guardian reads: "Pressure on Mahmood over immigration bill."
The headline on the front page of the Daily Mail reads: "Migration crackdown is softened for Burnham."
The headline on the front page of the Times reads: "More cash set to go north."
The headline on the front page of the Daily Express reads: "Our freedoms are at great risk."
The headline on the front page of the FT Weekend reads: "Europe bakes in fierce heat."
The headline on the front page of the Sun reads: "Harry to take kids to Di grave."
The headline on the front page of the Sun reads: "Harry Kane is magic!"
The headline on the front page of the Daily Mirror reads: "The Big Apple corps."

The Daily Telegraph reports, external that the former Cabinet Secretary Lord Case is urging Andy Burnham to “be honest” with the public and, if he becomes prime minister, call an early general election. In an interview with the paper, Lord Case says Burnham is walking “a very difficult tight rope” because he has promised change but has no mandate to deliver it.

The front page of the Times, external also focuses on Burnham, reporting that he’s expected to say the south is paying the price for economic failure in the north when he delivers a major speech next week. In what the paper calls Burnham’s first big policy speech since Sir Keir Starmer’s resignation, he’s due to set out a strategy that would see Whitehall budgets slashed and money diverted to regional mayors.

A landmark study warning that screen time for babies and toddlers under two has been linked to long-term negative effects on health and quality of life is highlighted by the Guardian, external. Researchers from the universities of Leeds, Leeds Trinity, Loughborough and Aston say they are worried that the focus on teenagers’ digital habits and government plans to ban under-16s from social media means there’s a “baby blind spot” in policy. A Department for Education spokesperson said the government’s recently published screentime guidance for parents of children aged under five provided clear and trusted support.

According to the FT Weekend, external, finance and technology firms are “rushing” to fire underperforming executives before new unfair dismissal rights come into force in the UK. Lawyers say the risk of high earners making expensive claims when a cap on pay for unfair dismissal is removed in the new year has prompted some employers to clear out what one legal director has described as the “deadwood” in senior leadership teams.

And many of the papers look ahead to England’s final group game at the World Cup this evening. The Daily Mail says, external the Panama match is set to deliver a “super Saturday surge” of £425m in sales for pubs and shops. “World cup fever” declares the Daily Mirror which reports, external that pubs are preparing to serve up an extra 4.5m pints as fans take advantage of England playing at the weekend for the first time this tournament.

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