German far right's 'big win' and school 'race hate surge'
The Times characterises the electoral success of the anti-immigration Alternative for Germany (AfD) party as the country's first "big win" for the far right since World War Two. It reports that the AfD won a regional state election, "breaking a political taboo that dates from the fall of the Nazis". Like other papers, it also carries the images of six Hamas hostages, whose bodies were recovered in Gaza by Israeli soldiers on Saturday.
The AfD's victory in Thuringia is also the focus of the Financial Times, which suggests voters have "quit" the centre ground in Germany. The paper describes the poll in the eastern state as a "disaster for [Chancellor Olaf] Scholz's coalition", and point out that the hard left also made gains.
The Daily Mirror focusses on domestic issues, with an exclusive story headlined "Race hate surge in schools". The paper reports that "almost 60 children a day were suspended from school for racism last year". It adds that means the number of race hate incidents among pupils rose by a quarter in 12 months.
Protests in Israel lead the Guardian, alongside the images of the six hostages also featured on the front pages of the Times and Financial Times. It reports that tens of thousands of Israelis took to the streets on Sunday and that a general strike had been called "amid an eruption of public outrage against the government".
The Daily Express brands the UK government's claim that it cut the winter fuel allowance to help to stop a run on the pound "ludicrous". Labour had been "derided for a "desperate attempt to defend axing winter fuel payments," it reported. Leader of the House of Commons Lucy Powell told BBC Breakfast on Sunday that there could have been a "run on the pound" had the government not taken action on public finances.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer's party is also criticised on the front page of the Daily Mail, suggesting in its headline that "Labour is 'scaring off' big business". The paper warns of a "sudden collapse" in economic confidence among bosses, amid "fears of a tax-raising Budget... and concern about Labour's plans for a union-friendly package of workers' rights".
One-word Ofsted statements are to be scrapped immediately, Metro reports. Its headline quips: "Grade big U-turn on schools". The report runs alongside a picture of headteacher Ruth Perry, who died by suicide while waiting for an Ofsted report to be published last year.
The Daily Telegraph leads with the same story, reporting that parents will "no longer be told whether a school is outstanding, good, requiring improvement or inadequate by inspectors". Instead, the Telegraph explains, school "report cards" will come in from September next year - "although the change has been introduced so swiftly that their exact form has not been decided".
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