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'Putin's brutal peace' and 'growing pains for Chancellor'

Reuters Rachel ReevesReuters

The Times says the governor of the Bank of England has dealt a blow to Labour's hopes for economic growth. The paper reports that Andrew Bailey used a lecture at Leicester university to warn about the "strong headwinds" of US tariffs and an ageing population.But the Times also says he struck an optimistic note about the potential of Artificial Intelligence to transform Britain's economic prospects.

TheFinancial Times leads with Donald Trump's threat to impose 25% tariffs on all imports from countries that buy oil from Venezuela. He's accused the South American country of sending thousands of criminals undercover to the US. The FT says the tariffs risk creating turmoil in the oil market and could sharply raise levies on goods from Venezuela's biggest customers, including China and India.

Metro's front page shows an injured Ukrainian woman after a Russian missile attack, with the headline "Putin's brutal peace offering". The Daily Express devotes its front page to amessage to the US president from its correspondent in Kyiv: "Mr Trump, wake up!" it says, adding that "Ukrainians are the victims".

The main story for theGuardian is a warning from police that domestic abusers are driving a growing number of victims to suicide. The latest official report reveals that such deaths have outnumbered cases of people killed by their partners for the second year in a row. The paper reports that police have admitted to past mistakes and pledged to investigate more "hidden" cases of violence against women.

TheDaily Telegraph reveals that the honours forfeiture committee threatened to strip the wealthy Reform UK supporter, Charlie Mullins, of his OBE last September, because of social media comments and offensive jokes dating back to 2022. In one, Mr Mullins said that someone should kill Mayor of London Sir Sadiq Khan. The businessman's lawyers promised that he would undertake diversity training and he has now been told he can keep the OBE. Mr Mullins tells the Telegraph he is the victim of a politically motivated attack. The government has not responded.

Finally, theTimes highlights research suggesting that using a cheap microphone in video conferencing can cost you desirability, hireability and credibility. The study at Yale University found that when a recording is of higher quality, listeners tend to judge the speaker as of higher quality too. By contrast, contributions on a tinny microphone are less compelling.

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