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Newspaper headlines: ‘PM drops pledges’ and NHS faces ‘quad-demic’

The Daily Telegraph headline: "PM drops pledges as economy stumbles"

The prime minister’s “plan for change” speech setting out key benchmarks to judge the government on leads several front pages. But the Daily Telegraph says Sir Keir Starmer has “watered down” two of his election pledges amid “signs the economy is struggling in the wake of his tax rising budget”. The paper notes the PM promised to get 95% of energy needs from low-carbon sources by 2030, down from 100% previously. It adds a vow to secure the highest economic growth in the G7 has become an “aim”.

The Times front page with headline: "PM vows to stop ‘nimby lobby’ and get building

The prime minister’s plans to increase housebuilding and reform Britain’s “ruinous” planning system are leading the Times. Writing in the paper, the PM has vowed to prevent homes and infrastructure being “held to ransom” and attacked “blockers and bureaucrats” who have “choked off” economic growth. The paper says Starmer has told ministers to draft plans to streamline environmental rules that can add millions in costs to development projects.

The i front page headline: "Starmer reset: PM tells public to judge him on whether living standards rise quickly in UK"

The i highlights Sir Keir telling the public to judge his government on whether living standards rise quickly, describing the PM as “gambling the next election on making voters feel better off”. A source in Downing Street has told the paper “we want people to judge us on delivery” and called for Labour to be given a chance to lead a “decade of national renewal”.

Daily Mail front page with headline: "Starmer's bingo hall parade of buzzwords and political nerdspeak"

The Daily Mail’s political sketch writer did not take to Starmer’s speech, describing it as a “bingo hall parade of buzzwords and political nerdspeak”. In his column featured on paper’s front page, Quentin Letts notes there “seven pillars”, “six milestones” and “five missions” and “three foundations” in the remarks, but notes the absence of “one firm target to cut migration”.

Guardian front page headline: "NHS facing a 'quad-demic' of emergencies as winter bites"

The NHS is facing what heath chiefs are describing “quad-demic” of emergencies this winter, with England’s hospitals “busier than ever” for the time of the year. The paper reports that the number of people with flu in hospital has quadrupled compared to last year, while cases of Covid, norovirus and respiratory synctial virus are also rising.

Daily Mirror front page with headline: "We’re four it now"

The four major viruses threatening the health service also leads the Daily Mirror, which reports that hospitals are “braced for a flood of patients”. Experts have urged those eligible for them to get seasonal vaccines, especially with Covid and RSV on the rise.

The Metro front page with headline "smiling assassin". It features three images, one of CCTV of a man from behind, wearing a hood and firing a gun with a suppressor. The second is of a man in hood smiling on CCTV. The third is a picture of a bullet casing,

Metro’s front page is dedicated to the fatal shooting of a healthcare executive in New York. Under the headline “Smiling Assassin” the paper features two CCTV images, one of the shooter and another released by police of a man in similar-looking clothing officers say is a person of interest. Metro reports the “grinning gunman” left “a cryptic three word message” by writing deny, deny and defend on the bullet casings used in the shooting, which it says echoes the “title of a book exposing tactics used by firms to beat claims”.

FT front page headline: "Covalis bid puts France’s Suez in line to manage break-up of Thames Water"

A plan for a French firm to lead a break-up of Thames Water assets before the company is publicly listed on the stock market is the lead story in the Financial Times. The paper says a bid by UK infrastructure firm Covalis capital could see water firm Suez water company appointed to manage the struggling utility, which is “saddled with £19bn in debt” and at risk of “running out of cash” next year.

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