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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 15th of December 2025

At least 15 people were killed at a Jewish event in Sydney. A bystander is hailed for bravery after disarming an attacker. Victims include a 10-year-old girl and a London-born rabbi. Authorities say the father-and-son suspects were stopped; one died, the other is critically ill. Dozens remain in hospital. Leaders condemned it as antisemitic.

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i Front Page 13th of December 2025

The NHS is mounting a pre-Christmas push to vaccinate children against flu, fearing spread to older relatives. School visits are planned, with uptake low and cases rising nationwide. WHO says the UK has entered an early epidemic. Parents are urged to keep symptomatic pupils at home.

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i Front Page 12th of December 2025

An intense flu wave is driving record infections, with the highest rates among schoolchildren and under‑5s. NHS leaders warn hospitals face severe pressure and urge vulnerable people to get vaccinated, noting protection takes about two weeks to develop.

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i Front Page 11th of December 2025

UK close to rejoining Erasmus from January 2027, in a Brexit reset for universities. A deal could be sealed before Christmas, with optimism on both sides and an EU route for UK institutions to apply next year. London seeks a better price after being offered a 30% discount.

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