The Papers: 'Find me some 'friends'' and 'Scrap farm raid'

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 Find me some 'friends'" reads the headline on the front page of the Daily Mirror.

Many of the papers lead with the latest tranche of the Epstein files released by the US Department of Justice, which includes an email exchange between Ghislaine Maxwell and a person signing off as 'A' writing from the "Balmoral Summer Camp for the Royal Family". The Daily Mirror says the author of the email asked Maxwell to "find me some 'friends'" who are described as "inappropriate", according to the paper. The emails do not indicate any wrongdoing. The BBC has contacted Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor's team for a response. The former prince has previously denied all wrongdoing.

 Find fun girls for Andrew" reads the headline on the front page of the Sun.

Under the headline "Ghislaine Maxwell emails revealed", the Sun says she allegedly sought to "find fun girls for Andrew".

 Epstein files reveal new email exchanges" reads the headline on the front page of the i Paper.

"Andrew, 'fun girls' and 'inappropriate friends'" is the i Paper's summary of the latest round of the Epstein files.

"Andrew faces new pressure after Epstein files reveal 'girls' emails," reads the headline on the front page of the Guardian.

The Guardian also leads with the "girls" email from the Epstein files, saying "Andrew faces new pressure". A photo shows climate activist Greta Thunberg being questioned by a police officer in London. The paper writes she was arrested "after protesting in support of the Prisoners for Palestine hunger strike".

"Tax threshold on inherited farmland rises to £2.5m after U-turn, but the fight goes on to completely scrap farm raid" reads the headline on the front page of the Daily Express.

The government will "scrap farm raid" plans, the Daily Express writes. Labour will raise the "tax threshold on inherited farmland" from £1m to £2.5m, the paper says. It quotes farmer Jonathan Charlesworth – whose dad took his own life "amid fears" of the tax – saying the change was "the best Christmas present for a lot of farmers". A preview of King Charles III's Christmas message, which will be delivered from Westminster Abbey, also features on the front page.

"Labour climbdown shrinks share of farmers facing inheritance tax to 15%" reads the headline on the front page of the Financial Times.

Labour's "quiet Christmas U-turn" on its inheritance tax plans is the Financial Times's take. "Treasury to forgo £130mn" in tax revenue as a consequence, the paper writes, as it "shrinks [the] share of farmers facing inheritance tax to 15%".

"Farmers win tax climbdown" reads the headline on the front page of the Times.

The Times says Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer faced a "revolt by Labour MPs" over the initial £1m inheritance tax threshold proposal, writing "Downing Street was warned that over 40 MPs were prepared to defy Starmer."

"Starmer's humiliating U-turn on farm tax" reads the headline on the front page of the Daily Mail.

The prime minister's "U-turn on farm tax" is described by the Daily Mail as a "humiliating capitulation to his backbenchers".

"Farmers cheer as Starmer U-turns on tractor tax raid" reads the headline on the front page of the Independent.

"Farmers cheer as Starmer U-turns on tractor tax raid" reads the Independent's headline, which the paper says follows "months of fierce protests – and financial anguish for many families".

 Loathe actually" reads the headline on the front page of the Daily Star.

"Loathe actually" is the Daily Star's headline spin on the popular Christmas film Love Actually, whose director Richard Curtis and his wife Emma Freud oppose "the idea of a 30-pitch campsite in their swanky village". Plans for the campsite were approved by East Sussex Council, which Mr Curtis "objects to", the paper says.

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