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The deadline for the Brexit talks gives Sunday papers a lot of material, as they report in various ways about possible food shortages, industry bailouts, and German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s alleged wish to see Gran Brittany “crawl through broken glass”.
Ministers have warned supermarkets to stockpile food amid the prospect of a no-deal Brexit, and shortages are feared as talks with the European Union remain stalled, the sunday time newspaper reports.
It says Boris Johnson will take over planning if Britain chooses not to reach a deal and will chair an exit operations committee to prepare the response. Suppliers of drugs, medical devices and vaccines have been told to rack up six weeks’ worth in safe locations in the UK, the report added.
the Sunday Telegraph The headline reads “Billions in No Deal Aid for Farmers and Factories” as it reports that the government has identified four areas of the economy – sheep farmers, fishermen, car manufacturers and chemical suppliers – most at risk to apply EU tariffs if Britain catapulted out of the bloc without a trade deal.
The financing package could be worth between £ 8bn and 10bn, the newspaper added.
There’s a creepier picture on the front of the Sunday mail, whose cover headline reads: “Merkel wants Britain to ‘crawl on broken glass'”. He cites an unspecified “source” who said the German chancellor was “determined” to see Britain suffer rather than come to a compromise on the sticking points of future government aid and fisheries.
He also takes the line that Johnson is “taking control” of no-deal planning by chairing a “supercommittee” that will work alongside the existing no-deal readiness group chaired by Michael Gove.
the Sunday Expressbellicose as ever, he proclaims “No deal – we’re ready!” with a catchphrase that reads “Britain says EU offer is ‘unacceptable’ as Prime Minister reveals plan to avoid Brexit chaos” .
the Observer reports of despair among senior conservatives at the prospect of a no-deal, led by Lord Heseltine. “Big Tories Fury Over ‘Nationalist’ Brexit Without Prime Minister’s Agreement,” says the headline, quoting the former cabinet minister as saying that he personally knows that various members of the current cabinet share his belief that leaving without a deal it will be the worst decision. taken over by a British government in modern times.
“This government will be, and should be, responsible for the worst peacetime decision of modern times. I personally know members of the Cabinet who believe this as strongly as I do. I cannot understand his silence, ”Hesltine writes for the newspaper.
the Sunday Mirror’s The sad headline is “Hours without a deal” as it reports that there are “fears of huge food price hikes and job cuts” if Britain leaves without a deal and has to pay tariffs to import EU goods. .
There is despair in Scotland too, where the Scotland on Sunday devotes its front page to the ‘Brexit mess’ as it investigates EU subsidies, the politicians who have benefited from them and what the future holds.
the Herald on sunday it predicts the ‘cruelest breakout in the world’, but it’s not even about Brexit, it refers to the possibility that the current route will lead to Scotland leaving the UK, or ‘Scexit’.