What the papers say – October 6
Here are the biggest stories leading Sunday’s front pages.
Here are the biggest stories leading Sunday’s front pages.
The Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders said registrations of new diesel cars in September for private buyers grew by 17.1%.
The capture of the strategically important town in the east of the country brings Russian forces closer to the key logistics hub of Pokrovsk.
A letter to the Chancellor has called for more investment in the FE sector to ensure colleges can deliver the extra space needed for a growing cohort.
Minister for Finance Jack Chambers said Budget 2025 has ‘the common good at its core’.
Jack Chambers said Budget 2025 presented a unique opportunity to ‘plan, transform and deliver for the future’.
Ukrainian officials said the attack was ‘most likely’ carried out by Russian artillery and hit close to a public transport stop in Kherson.
DEPUTY LYNDON TROTT has always claimed that he understands business and so we should trust him with our economy.
The Conservative leadership hopeful also branded VAT on private schools a ‘vindictive and nasty policy’.
Jaideep Barot, the first non-white chairman of an elite independent schools group, has called for greater diversity in educational leadership.
It was one of the largest barrages seen in Russian skies since the start of the war in February 2022.
Candidates have touched on subjects from tax to immigration and the party’s future in a series of interviews.
The online marketplace said it paid £932 million in direct taxes in the UK over 2023.
The supermarket group said its like-for-like sales, excluding fuel and VAT, grew by 2.9% in the three months to July 28.
The Education Secretary said early years education and childcare were her ‘first priority’ as she set out the Government’s plans.