November 25, 2025 – UK Headlines

1Everton brush off bizarre Gueye red card to beat lethargic Manchester United

Story gist: Everton defeated Manchester United in a Premier League match despite midfielder Idrissa Gueye receiving a red card. Manchester United manager Ruben Amorim commented on his team’s poor performance.
Left
Everton brush off bizarre Gueye red card to beat lethargic Manchester United
— The Guardian
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Center
‘I hope my players fight each other’ – Amorim’s Man Utd ‘nowhere near’
— BBC
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Right
No major right-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Bias summary: Left-leaning Guardian frames Everton’s win positively, calling Gueye’s red card ‘bizarre’ and United ‘lethargic,’ emphasizing Everton resilience. Center BBC highlights Amorim’s critical quotes on United’s failings, like being ‘nowhere near’ and internal conflicts. Right-leaning coverage absent, omitting pro-United angles, referee scrutiny, or Everton criticism.

2Starmer and Lammy to avoid ‘mansion tax’ after Treasury softens rules

Story gist: UK Treasury softened Budget rules on higher stamp duty for homes over £2 million. Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Foreign Secretary David Lammy’s properties avoid the increased rates.
Left
Mortgage brokers say house buying at risk from surveyor ‘down valuing’
— The Guardian
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Center
Homes worth more than £2mn set to be hit by Budget raid
— Financial Times
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Right
Starmer and Lammy to avoid ‘mansion tax’ after Treasury softens rules
— The Telegraph
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Bias summary: Right-leaning outlets frame the story around Labour leaders Starmer and Lammy dodging their own ‘mansion tax,’ implying hypocrisy via pointed naming. Center coverage emphasizes tax ‘raid’ on high-value homes, focusing on policy impact. Left-leaning sources highlight surveyor ‘down-valuing’ risks to general house buying, omitting politician exemptions and stressing broader market threats.

3Updated peace plan could be a deal Ukraine will take – eventually

Story gist: EU leaders welcomed new momentum in Ukraine peace talks while stressing red lines on territory. An updated peace plan emerged that Ukraine might accept eventually.
Left
EU leaders welcome ‘new momentum’ in Ukraine peace talks but stress red lines on territory – as it happened
— The Guardian
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Center
Updated peace plan could be a deal Ukraine will take – eventually
— BBC
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Right
No major right-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Bias summary: Left-leaning Guardian emphasizes EU welcome of ‘new momentum’ alongside firm territorial red lines, stressing caution and unity. Center BBC frames neutrally as updated plan Ukraine could take eventually, focusing on potential viability. Right-leaning coverage absent, missing emphasis on peace urgency, concessions, or Ukrainian resistance critiques.

4US judge dismisses charges against James Comey and Letitia James

Story gist: A U.S. judge dismissed criminal charges against former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James.
Left
Outrage over Democrats’ video telling soldiers to refuse to follow illegal orders defies ‘basic morality’, says Ron Paul – live
— The Guardian
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Center
Judge dismisses criminal cases against Trump political adversaries Comey and James
— BBC
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Right
No major right-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Bias summary: Left-leaning outlets like The Guardian omit the dismissal, instead highlighting Ron Paul’s outrage over a Democrats’ video urging soldiers to refuse illegal orders, diverting to anti-Democrat criticism. Center outlets like BBC neutrally report the event, framing Comey and James as ‘Trump political adversaries.’ Right-leaning coverage is absent, missing likely emphasis on perceived protection of anti-Trump figures.