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A few papers largely avoid the royal saga on their front pages, starting with the i weekend, which claims that a Chinese tracking device has been discovered hidden inside a British government official’s car. At the time of writing, senior Whitehall officials had refused to comment on the allegations. The paper also teases a look on its inside pages at the ongoing political drama in the US, where a Speaker for the House of Representatives had still not been decided after more than a dozen votes. It quotes journalist Emily Maitlis as saying the saga means the UK is no longer the “laughing stock of the world”.

i Front Page 5th of December 2025

Liz Kendall rejects claims Labour is the party of welfare, calling the label ignorant. She defends tax rises to fund reforms, including ending the two‑child cap and expanding help with nursery fees. Labour says the package could lift 550,000 children out of poverty by 2030, despite criticism from the Tories and Reform.

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i Front Page 4th of December 2025

UK authorities are probing claims that foreign operatives used cargo ships and smaller ports to enter the country, then visited areas near military bases and critical infrastructure. Security services are tightening dock checks and examining shipping as a tool for hostile activity.

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i Front Page 3rd of December 2025

After 36 years of inquiries into the 1989 Hillsborough stadium disaster, a new review says 12 police officers would face gross misconduct cases under today’s rules and confirms major operational failures. No officer will be convicted for errors or alleged cover‑up, leaving families dismayed.

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i Front Page 2nd of December 2025

OBR chair Richard Hughes has been forced out after a clash with the Treasury. An accidental Budget leak and a timeline he released appeared to contradict the Chancellor’s account of a funding gap. Relations collapsed after the watchdog declined to give full advance sight of its inquiry.

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