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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: Dec.14: 2022:

#AceDailyNews says here’s todays Newspaper Headlines: The PM’s plans for the asylum system, as another ‘ migrant boat sinks ‘ in the English Channel with 4 – illegals dead and at least 43 rescued Kindness & Love XX says 🙏🙏’s for the families of those who died Amen

The main image on the front page of the Daily Mail is of Prince William, Kate, George, Charlotte and Louis.
The Daily Mail splashes with an exclusive interview with Rishi Sunak. The PM told the paper the asylum system is “not fair, not right and it needs to be fixed”. He plans change the law to prevent migrants claiming asylum and said those arriving in the UK illegally would be “swiftly detained” and sent back, the paper says. Several of today’s papers showcase William and Kate’s Christmas card, which the Mail says will cheer us all up.
The Telegraph's front page features an image of a fox climbing a pile of letters and parcels.
And writing in the Telegraph, the PM promised to deliver legislation early next year that will make it “unambiguously clear” that anyone coming to the UK illegally will have no right to remain here. The paper also says rats and foxes have been seen amongst parcels and letters that have been left outside the Royal Mail’s Bristol depot.
The i front page.
But the i reports Sunak is facing backlash from MPs over plans to house asylum seekers in Pontins holiday parks. One local Tory MP says the policy is “not appropriate”, the paper notes.
DailyExpress front page
“Can we have our country back, please” asks the Daily Express. The paper says the PM has urged unions to “find a way through” as he warned that strike action would make “an enormous negative difference to people’s lives.”
RMT leader Mick Lynch on the front page of the Sun.
The Sun says the PM has urged RMT boss Mick Lynch to cancel the rail strikes after it emerged workers are losing up to £5,000 over the walkouts.
The front page of the Times.
The Times says patients’ lives could be at risk during the nurses’ strike tomorrow as the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) has not committed to fully staffing services such as A&E, mental health care and some cancer services. Dame Ruth May, the chief nursing officer for England, has written to Pat Cullen, the RCN’s general secretary, to say that many nursing leaders feel let down by the union, the paper reports.
The Mirror front page.
The nurses’ strike is also dominating the Mirror’s front page. The paper reports that RCN boss Pat Cullen has pleaded for the public to support the strike action, saying staff had been backed into a corner over the government’s refusal to boost pay.
Sam Bankman-Fried is the main image on the front page of the FT
The FT says Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey has warned No 10 against going too far with its programme to deregulate the City. Elsewhere, the paper reports that Qatar offered EU lawmakers World Cup tickets and free trips in a bid to persuade them to soften their criticism of its treatment of migrant workers. The paper’s main image is of Sam Bankman-Fried, the FTX boss facing fraud charges.
The Guardian front page.
The health service is at breaking point, according to a special report from the Guardian, which spent 33 hours inside the NHS.
Daily Star front page
The Daily Star’s main story is about a border collie that crashed its owner’s car after jumping into the driver’s seat and knocking the handbrake off. “Just another totally normal day in Britain”, the paper quips.

Several front pages highlight Rishi Sunak’s pledge to clear the backlog of asylum claims, including the Times, which said the prime minister had “staked his political future” on resolving the issue. 

In an interview with the Mail, Mr Sunak describes the current system as “not fair” and “not right”, and promises to cut what he calls the “appalling” costs of housing migrants in hotels while they wait for their cases to be assessed. 

Writing in the Telegraph, the prime minister said migrants who get to the UK by “cheating” will be barred from claiming asylum.

The Times features the warning by nursing leaders that patients’ lives could be put at risk during Thursday’s strike by nurses, because of what they say is the failure of unions to protect key services from disruption. 

The Telegraph said there were fears that urgent cancer surgery could be cancelled. But the newspaper reports that the nurses’ union, the RCN, has dismissed the concerns as a “politically-motivated smear from a government failing patients”. 

The Mirror reports the RCN has appealed for public support ahead of the walkout, insisting it is fighting to protect the NHS for all. In what it calls a “special report”, the Guardian devotes five pages to focusing on the pressures facing a busy London hospital. “33 hours inside an NHS on the brink”, the headline reads. The paper reports on “swamped” emergency departments, “crammed” wards and “burnt-out” GPs, concluding that the health service is “at breaking point”.

With the headline, “You’ve Lost It, Lynch”, The Sun claims the leader of the RMT union saw support for strikes by rail workers “running out of steam” on Tuesday. It said Mick Lynch was “losing public sympathy” for the walkouts as he “piles on the misery” with weeks of action, prompting him to “lose his rag” twice during live interviews on Tuesday morning. The paper’s leader column argues that RMT members increasingly know they should accept the offer made to them by Network Rail, as “much of Britain has grimly swallowed far worse”.

Union sources have told the Telegraph that rats and foxes have been gnawing Christmas parcels and letters left outside depots during strikes by postal workers. A spokesman from the Communication Workers Union is quoted as saying the backlog “will take at least a month to clear”, but Royal Mail said the items were moving “very quickly” on to the next stage of their journey. The company did not respond to the claims about rats and foxes.

The Express is one of several papers to feature the image chosen by the Prince and Princess of Wales for their official Christmas card. The photograph, taken in Norfolk earlier this year, in weather warm enough for shorts, shows the couple smiling as they walk hand-in-hand with their three children. The paper said the picture showed the happier side of royal life, ahead of Thursday’s release of the final three episodes of the Netflix series about the Duke and Duchess of Sussex. The Mail reports that new polling suggests Prince Harry was Britain’s most unpopular Royal, with just a third of people now holding a positive view of him.

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