What the papers say – December 28
The papers on Wednesday carry industrial action updates and political jostling.
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Your support makes all the difference.Cost-of-living difficulties and terrorising pigs lead the front pages.
Unions have a new tactic to increase the number of major walkouts across the transport network, reports the i.
Next to join the industrial action ranks could be junior doctors, who are to be balloted on striking from January 9, with the Daily Mirror citing a survey showing two-thirds of them are looking to leave the NHS.
Winter and the cost-of-living crisis have forced thousands of vulnerable cancer patients into isolation, a charity tells the Daily Express.
Food bank managers warn the Government in The Independent that a “tsunami of need” could see hungry families turned away in the new year, with donations falling as demand steadily rises.
The Times claims an argument between Cabinet colleagues Suella Braverman and Michael Gove has pushed back long-anticipated counter-terrorism reforms.
Top brass must take action over an “epidemic” of predatory behaviour and sexual assault at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, The Daily Telegraph cites a charity as saying.
The Financial Times reports China will remove quarantine requirements for inbound travellers from January 8.
Union leaders are accused in the Daily Mail of plotting a “de facto general strike” after they launched a loyalty-card scheme designed to swell picket lines.
And the Daily Star says runaway pigs have been terrorising a village, leading them to be called the “porky blinders”.