1ITV News Exclusive: Moment wrongly released Wandsworth prisoner hands himself back in
Story gist: Billy Smith, a prisoner mistakenly released from Wandsworth Prison, turned himself in. The Prime Minister expressed anger and frustration over the mistaken prisoner releases.
Mistakenly released prisoner Billy Smith turns himself in
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PM ‘angry and frustrated’ at mistaken prisoner releases
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No major right-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Bias summary: Left-leaning outlets like The Guardian frame the story by emphasizing the prisoner’s responsible action in turning himself in, focusing on the individual. Center outlets like the BBC highlight the Prime Minister’s anger and frustration, centering government response to systemic errors. Right-leaning coverage is absent, omitting potential emphasis on prison system failures or calls for stricter oversight.
2Southport families say killer’s parents ‘should be accountable’
Story gist: Families of victims in the Southport attack stated during an inquiry that the killer’s parents should be held accountable. The comments were made in relation to the 2024 incident where three children were killed.
Southport inquiry: killer’s parents must be ‘held to account’, say victims’ families
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Southport families say killer’s parents ‘should be accountable’
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Bereaved families say Southport killer’s family failed
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Bias summary: Left-leaning outlets like The Guardian frame the story with emphatic language such as ‘must be held to account,’ highlighting the inquiry’s role and victims’ demands for justice. Center outlets like the BBC use neutral phrasing, focusing on families’ direct statements without added intensity. Right-leaning The Times emphasizes the killer’s family’s ‘failure,’ implying negligence and personal responsibility. No major omissions across lanes, but left stresses systemic accountability while right personalizes blame.
3Banks poised to escape tax rises in Rachel Reeves’s budget
Story gist: UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves delivered a speech ahead of the 2025 budget. Reports indicate banks are poised to avoid tax increases, while plans include raising income tax.
Banks poised to escape tax rises in Rachel Reeves’s budget
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Chancellors Scene Setter speech ahead of Budget 2025
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Rachel Reeves plans to raise income tax in upcoming budget
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Bias summary: Left-leaning outlets like The Guardian emphasize banks escaping tax rises, implying favoritism toward corporations and potential inequality. Center sources such as GOV.UK provide neutral, official previews of the budget speech without specific tax details or framing. Right-leaning The Times focuses on income tax hikes, highlighting burdens on individuals and workers, omitting corporate tax relief.
4Reeves poised to unveil Budget plan for EV drivers to pay per mile charges
Story gist: UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves is set to unveil a pay-per-mile charging plan for electric vehicle drivers in the upcoming Budget. The proposal aims to introduce charges based on mileage driven.
Rachel Reeves considering pay-per-mile tax for electric vehicles in budget
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EV drivers could face new tax in Budget
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Pay-per-mile electric car levy ‘will stall uptake’ of EVS
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Bias summary: Left-leaning Guardian frames the story as Rachel Reeves ‘considering’ a ‘pay-per-mile tax,’ emphasizing policy deliberation without strong critique. Center BBC neutrally reports EV drivers ‘could face’ a ‘new tax,’ focusing on potential direct impact. Right-leaning Times highlights the levy’s risk to ‘stall uptake’ of EVs, emphasizing economic drawbacks and quoting opposition to underscore anti-EV adoption concerns.