There is much speculation about the likely impact of Monday’s public spending cuts announcement in the newspapers.
The Sunday Times says the £6bn in cuts and a spending review will see at least 300,000 civil servants and frontline staff eventually lose their jobs.
The paper says this will include many thousands of doctors and nurses, and police officers.
Writing in the News of the World, David Cameron says he will make sure the most vulnerable are protected from cuts.
Expenditure audit
Many of the papers welcome the half a billion pounds in savings that will come from cutting quangos.
The Sunday Express sees these cuts as a "Whitehall war on waste", and The Mail on Sunday describes them as a "bonfire of the quangos".
The Mail is among several papers to highlight an emergency audit on the previous government’s expenditure.
This included £125m a year on taxis, £320m on hotels and also £580m on office furniture.
The Independent on Sunday focuses on next month’s emergency budget.
It says banks face an £8bn tax hike, nearly three times higher than originally planned.
Tortoise security
There is also coverage of the problems many papers believe David Cameron has brought on himself by changing the membership rules of the Conservative backbench 1922 Committee.
The News of the World says the prime minister faces a no-confidence vote from within his own party because many MPs think he sold out to the Liberal Democrats.
The Sunday Telegraph says installing CCTV systems and motion sensitive alarms is the latest advice for tortoise owners.
Thefts have apparently risen by 50%, with the pets fetching up to £6,000 on the black market.
Also in the Telegraph, the cartoonist Matt has a lighter take on British Airways’s woes.
As an elderly couple spot a headline "BA loses £531m" one asks the other "Could it be in a suitcase somewhere?".
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