麻豆官网首页入口

Front pages examine Labour Party conference

  • Published
Jeremy CorbynImage source, Reuters

Shadow chancellor John McDonnell might be hailing a but his party leader is under fire elsewhere over his Brexit stance - and he's not the only one.

The after edging Labour closer to supporting the campaign to overturn Brexit.

Mr Corbyn has indicated he will be bound by Labour members' vote on a conference motion exploring whether to keep options open over Brexit, including the possibility of calling for a "people's vote".

Chairman of the Leave Means Leave pressure group, John Longworth, tells the paper a fresh ballot would "disenfranchise" millions who voted to depart from the EU.

'Bizarre' plan

Conservative party chairman Brandon Lewis said the last pretence that Labour respected the democratic decision of the British people was rapidly disappearing.

However, Home Secretary . It says he will dismay Brexiteers by proposing that EU citizens have limitless access to the UK for 30 months in the event of a "no-deal" Brexit.

The paper quotes former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith as calling the plan "bizarre".

And the is leading the fight to encourage the prime minister to change tack in her negotiations. It says the majority of the cabinet backs him in supporting a move towards a Canada-style trade deal with the EU.

Telly addicts

One story is plugged on nearly all the front pages, and it's not political.

The climax to the 麻豆官网首页入口's Bodyguard drama - about a protection officer assigned to the home secretary - had critics working late to file their reviews.

The , featuring episodes with cliffhangers that you talked about the next day.

In the was "underwhelming" until the last "cracking 10 minutes."

For the but was let down by an "average" plot. "It could have been brilliant but somehow failed to reach its potential," she writes.

System faults?

The over its approach to rape has been revealed with the news that less than a third of prosecutions against young men result in a conviction.

The figures - the result of a freedom of information request by the Labour MP Ann Coffey - show that men aged 18 to 24 are consistently less likely to be found guilty than older men on trial.

She tells the paper the figures bring the whole system into disrepute.

Meanwhile, the could "slip through the net" of authorities to carry out attacks.

The paper quotes Ian Acheson - who reviewed Islamic extremism in British jails for the government - saying the record number of terrorists being locked up could accelerate radicalisation.

He tells the website that overcrowding and understaffing were fuelling an atmosphere where there was no capacity for staff to "challenge ideologies".

Club classic

Under the headline "Woods rocks Tour championship", the first golfing tour victory for five years.

The paper says that when going into the final round at Atlanta with a three-shot lead, Woods just needed to "stand strong" amid the swirl of chaos that surrounded him.

The last of his 79 PGA tour victories came in 2013 and he underwent a spinal fusion operation last year. And Woods tells the paper that winning again is a "pretty damned good feeling".

Image source, Getty Images

Meanwhile, to transform itself from the home of the gin and tonic at the 19th hole to an athletic, accessible sport fit for the 21st Century.

The paper says a World Golf Foundation report recommends that golf clubs have childcare facilities to make it easier for parents to play.

It also advises the adoption of "speed golf", where players aim to tackle 18 holes with the fewest number of shots in the fastest time possible. The current world record stands at 65 shots over 44 minutes, the Times adds.