Newspaper headlines: Kevin Spacey 'wiped' and a Brexit breakthrough?
Prime Minister Theresa May is to "kickstart Brexit talks with a divorce bill offer," according to the i. It says some Brexiteers now accept the UK must pay a bigger EU settlement in order to end deadlock with Brussels.
UK and European business leaders have told Mrs May to speed up Brexit negotiations, according to the Guardian. It says they have called for "urgent breakthrough" in talks between UK and EU negotiators.
The PM is daring potential rebels "to defy her on Brexit", says the Daily Telegraph. It says Mrs May has warned potential Tory troublemakers that she will not tolerate any attempts to undermine her.
The UK's "true" EU membership bill is actually £ 980m a week, according to the Daily Express. It says that means it is treble the £ 350m-a-week figure - which was promised to the NHS - quoted by the EU referendum.
The Daily Mirror calls on the prime minister to sack Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson over a "gaffe" that could leave a British mother facing five more years in an Iranian prison. It quotes one Tory MP as saying "he must go".
"Spaced out" is the front page headline of the Metro. It is a reference to the story that American actor Kevin Spacey is to be erased from a completed Hollywood movie before it is released, because of the allegations of predatory sexual behavior that has been made against him.
The Times features a photograph of a barely recognisable Space in the film, called All the Money in the World. Its main story claims ex-prime minister David Cameron lobbied China on behalf of a friend and former donor over a planned £ 500m investment fund.
"Readies salted, Gary?" is the question posed by the front page headline on the Sun. It says Match of the Day host - and the face of Walkers Crisps - Gary Lineker has been named in the so-called Paradise Papers over the amount of tax he paid on a home in Barbados. Lineker has since pointed out on Twitter: "I do pay my taxes properly and thoroughly, however hard some will attempt to claim otherwise."
The Daily Mail leads on comments by Met Police commissioner, Cressida Dick, that young criminals could face "harsher and more effective" prison sentences. She says there is a hard core of young criminals who are "simply not fearful" of courts.
The Daily Star leads with claims Cheryl Tweedy and Nicole Scherzinger are "supremo" favorites of the "favorites" of X Factor "supremo" Simon Cowell.
And in the business world, the Financial Times says the Saudi government is expected to sign off a Saudi Arabia's state energy group's Saudi Arabia stock exchange flotation.
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