What the papers say - June 11
Tensions after the G7 summit and impending crunch Brexit votes in the Commons top the headlines on Monday.
The Times reports that Donald Trump's relations with his European allies "sank to a new low" as he arrived in Singapore for talks with Kim Jong Un.
The US president provoked another row with his western counterparts when he revealed he would not sign a G7 communique that had been agreed by the world leaders, and hit out at Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau, the paper adds.
Tomorrow's front page: Trump 'stabbed in back' by G7 #tomorrowspapertodaypic.twitter.com/AwPXqVP8Hu
-- The Times of London (@thetimes) June 10, 2018
The Financial Times says Mr Trump had left the west in "disarray" and reports that it was the most acrimonious G7 summit in a generation, while the Metro says the president's angry tweets came as he "cosies up" to Mr Kim.
Just published: front page of the Financial Times UK edition, Monday June 11 https://t.co/Wsy9CrUsMvpic.twitter.com/UEtIt76PGH
-- Financial Times (@FinancialTimes) June 10, 2018
METRO: Trump falls out with key allies #tomorrowspaperstodaypic.twitter.com/UXIzusPgKs
-- Neil Henderson (@hendopolis) June 10, 2018
Mr Trump's chief economic adviser claimed Mr Trudeau had "stabbed us in the back", The Guardian reports, with the president describing the PM as "dishonest and weak".
The paper leads, however, on calls for the police and parliament to investigate the links between the millionaire Brexit donor Arron Banks and the Russian government.
Guardian front page, Monday 11 June 2018: MPs call for police inquiry into Brexit donor's Kremlin links pic.twitter.com/SMCUGtpyHf
-- The Guardian (@guardian) June 10, 2018
The Daily Telegraph also features Mr Trump's Twitter outburst on its front page, reporting that his attack on Mr Trudeau was a demonstration of strength as he prepares for tomorrow's summit with North Korea.
The paper leads on a new campaign, calling for media and online gaming firms to have a statutory "duty of care" to protect children from mental ill health, abuse and addictive behaviour.
'Force social media firms to protect children' - the front page of The Daily @Telegraph tomorrow.
Read more: https://t.co/CSECjSkx1Q#tomorrowspaperstodaypic.twitter.com/0ZRBZBxEFZ
-- The Telegraph (@Telegraph) June 10, 2018
Meanwhile, an important week in the Brexit process makes the front of the i, which says the Tories are rallying for a "showdown" in the Commons.
Cabinet ministers are increasingly confident they can win crunch votes on EU withdrawal, the paper adds.
I: Tories rally for Brexit showdown in Commons #tomorrowspaperstodaypic.twitter.com/CQPEijikKV
-- Neil Henderson (@hendopolis) June 10, 2018
The Sun claims that Britain's new £100 million F-35 Lightning jets are protected by a 5ft picket fence, calling them a "sitting duck for terrorists".
Tomorrow's front page: Outrage as £100m RAF warplanes are protected by a flimsy 5ft picket fence https://t.co/CmWdu5jQlFpic.twitter.com/88tlHVG3Kh
-- The Sun (@TheSun) June 10, 2018
And Corrie star Bill Roache tells the Daily Mirror he has forgiven those who falsely accused him of sex abuse.
Tomorrow's front page: Why I forgive sex trial accusers#tomorrowspaperstodayhttps://t.co/QaBrHYssWGpic.twitter.com/oqURB1RJ4d
-- Daily Mirror (@DailyMirror) June 10, 2018
Elsewhere, the Daily Express reports that millions of heart failure patients could be saved thanks to a new stem cell therapy being tested in Britain, while the Daily Star says forecasters are predicting a three-month heatwave for Britain.
STAR: The heat is on #tomorrowspaperstodaypic.twitter.com/sTGSjVjVyQ
-- Neil Henderson (@hendopolis) June 10, 2018
EXPRESS: Wonder stem cell cure for heart failure #tomorrowspaperstodaypic.twitter.com/YbaJugeSgj
-- Neil Henderson (@hendopolis) June 10, 2018