Like most papers on Friday, the Daily Mail is dominated by the “Impossible Broms” exhibited by Donald Trump and Sir Kyle Starmer when they met at the White House. The first meeting between the two leaders seems to be very cordial since the latest election victory of the U.S. president.
My newspaper called “Charmer Starmer” and said the President “Jovial” praised the Prime Minister. The two discussed Ukraine, the Chagos Islands deal and future UK trade deals during a private meeting in Washington.
Starmer’s so-called trump card was handed to President King Charles III to invite him to a state visit. Trump received honors in the first term of the late Queen Elizabeth II, but the second term of the second monarch was described as “unprecedented.”
“Love” is how the Sun describes Trump-Stummer’s meeting. Its front page carries a picture that illustrates Starmer handing him a personal invitation to the king in a panoramic view of the camera, which the newspaper says has “excited” the president.
The Financial Times led the two to negotiate on Ukraine’s future security arrangements. The paper says Trump has broken Starmer’s hopes for any American “back” of European peacekeeping forces, which the Prime Minister has been pushing.
However, guardian adoption is slightly different. It highlights Trump’s rhetoric that the presence of American workers in Ukraine will actually become a backlash, preventing Russian invasion again. Trump is pushing U.S. companies to enter Ukraine’s mineral mining industry.
The Daily Telegraph leads Trump’s support for the British government’s plan, which is sovereignty in the Chagos Islands, where the British military base is located, and has been offered to Mauritius in exchange for a deal to secure the long-term future of the site. The British opposition opposition opposes the deal, but Trump describes its term as “strong” and says “it doesn’t sound bad.”
The focus of the times is trade negotiations between the two, and Trump said negotiations on the “new economy agreement” have begun and consensus can be reached “quickly”. This will give Starmer a relief, the paper said, who fears that our tariffs may hinder the government’s attempt to grow the economy.
The death of mysterious actor Gene Hackman is surrounded by the death of him, who is found dead at his home in New Mexico with his pianist wife Betsy Arakawa. Police said they were not injured, but the situation was “suspicious enough” to allow further investigation.
Finally, “Daily Star” leads the news that the creator of the cartoon pig reveals that the mother character is giving birth to a child.