2025-04-07
Daily Express Front Page 7th of April 2025
The PM has pledged funding to enable veterans to visit memorial events and honour their fallen comrades without financial hardship.
The PM has pledged funding to enable veterans to visit memorial events and honour their fallen comrades without financial hardship.
Nine out of ten GPs want the NHS to introduce a prostate screening programme, with health experts saying it could save hundreds of lives by focusing first on men at highest risk.
Labour has pledged to back vital domestic businesses affected by escalating tariffs, promising a fiscal and strategic framework that safeguards jobs, bolsters growth, and counters the adverse trading environment.
The PM is expected to relax the 2030 petrol car ban by allowing hybrids to remain on sale for five more years, with ministers planning to close certain agencies to drive efficiency and shift towards a more interventionist approach in order to bolster businesses against global trade pressures.
The country can expect a sunny and unseasonably warm Easter break, with forecasters predicting a large-scale 24C heat dome prompting calls to dust off the suncream.
Streeting’s support for bringing health services directly to people’s homes seeks to ease strain on hospitals, offering earlier interventions and cutting reliance on state care.
Senior officials have dismissed market jitters and insisted on pressing ahead with imposing tariffs despite recession worries, affirming an uncompromising stance on trade measures and sparking investor unease.
Elon Musk, a prominent entrepreneur allied with a former US leader, has urged a rethink of planned border duties and advocated for barrier-free commerce between Europe and key partners, citing potential long-term economic benefits for all involved.
British entrepreneurs have built thriving cannabis operations on a sun-kissed island once featured in a popular show, prompting debate over legal oversight, tourism impact and local community concerns.
There are warnings that an Iron Dome-style defence would fail to fully shield Britain from advanced missile threats in a potential war with Russia, prompting the PM and Western allies to pursue more robust protective measures.