What the papers say: Wednesday's front pages

Wednesday’s front pages
What the papers say: Wednesday's front pages

How Donald Trump's tariff crackdown, which he has dubbed 'Liberation Day', will impact on Ireland and the EU dominates Wednesday's front pages.

The Irish Times, Irish Examiner and Irish Independent lead with the US tariffs.

The Echo and the Irish Sun also lead with the threat US tariffs pose to businesses in Ireland.

The Government is set to shelve the Occupied Territories Bill to 'keep the US happy', the Irish Daily Mail reports.

CAB found stairs missing at the home of a gang member, The Herald reports.

In the North, the Belfast Telegraph leads with the controversial 'Brand Builder' company, which has been shut down leaving clients in the lurch.

The Irish News leads with a pub stabbing.

Donald Trump’s tariff blitz dominates headlines across Wednesday’s UK newspapers.

The Times, the Independent and the i Paper say the US president is expected to hit the UK with a raft of tariffs, which will come into immediate effect.

However, the Daily Telegraph says prime minister Sir Keir Starmer is preparing a number of economic concessions in an attempt to persuade Mr Trump to spare the UK from his “liberation day” trade crackdown.

Among the concessions, according to The Guardian, would be a significant tax cut for US technology companies.

Meanwhile, the Financial Times says scared investors are pouring into gold funds at the highest rate since the pandemic amid US tariff concerns.

The Daily Mirror splashes on fears 25,000 car industry jobs could be lost in the tariff campaign.

And the Daily Mail warns that tariffs could trigger a fresh crisis for chancellor Rachel Reeves, who delivered her spring economic statement last week.

Metro leads on a Chinese student convicted of drugging and raping 10 women,  as well as 23 more women coming forward with their own allegations.

Lastly, The Sun writes that the charity boss who accused Britain's Duke of Sussex of harassment has deleted her social media s after being harassed by ers of Harry and his wife.

US attorney general Pam Bondi said on Tuesday that she would seek the death penalty for Luigi Mangione, who was charged with murdering a UnitedHealthcare executive in Manhattan last year, The New York Times reports.

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