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The stories leading Thursday’s papers vary widely, but The Times leads with its investigation into British Gas and findings that the company uses debt collectors to install prepayment meters in vulnerable people’s homes. An undercover reporter accompanied debt agents to “break into the home” of a single father and “switch them to a prepayment meter”, the story says, adding that if families with these gas meters cannot afford to top up, their heating is “cut off”. Following the report, British Gas’s owner Centrica said it would suspend the use of court warrants that allow forced installations.

Times Front Page 5th of December 2025

Household bills are set to rise as Ofgem introduces levies to fund grid and pipeline upgrades. The charges, supporting a £58bn networks programme and wider expansion, will climb over the decade, offsetting the Chancellor’s £159-a-year bill cut and reaching about £116 annually by 2030.

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Times Front Page 4th of December 2025

The health secretary has ordered an independent review into rising ADHD diagnoses and associated benefit claims. It will scrutinise assessment standards, private clinics and medication, and pressures on services. The aim is to tighten rules while protecting support for genuine need.

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Times Front Page 3rd of December 2025

Plans for a per‑mile levy on electric driving could leave millions of plug‑in hybrid owners paying twice, with a 15p‑a‑mile charge from 2028 on top of fuel duty and existing taxes. Industry groups warn this may deter buyers and slow the shift to cleaner cars, urging ministers to clarify how charges will apply.

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Times Front Page 2nd of December 2025

Richard Hughes resigned as OBR chair after an inquiry blamed procedural failings for the watchdog’s early release of Budget analysis. Dubbed its worst failure, the leak drew rebukes from the PM and Chancellor. The OBR will tighten data protocols while a successor is found.

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