Newspaper headlines: PM 'under fire for Brexit dividend claim' and 'We Kane Do It' By BBC News

Staff Published duration 18 June 2018

There is widespread reaction to Theresa May's pledge to spend more on the NHS.

The paper also warns of a "disturbing vagueness" in the prime minister's explanation of where the extra money needed to pay for it will come from.

The Mirror accuses Mrs May of playing "silly political games, claiming generosity while pledging significantly less than is needed".

The Charles Rennie Mackintosh masterpiece, the Glasgow School of Art - which was gutted by fire for a second time at the weekend - could be rebuilt according to the Daily Telegraph

The paper reports that a digital map of the building, created after the previous blaze, recorded the structure down to the last millimetre.

Architecture writer Clive Aslet argues in the online edition of the Times that "if the dome of Castle Howard could be rebuilt after a fire, using old photographs from Country Life, there's no reason why the Glasgow School of Art should not rise again from the ashes - for the second time".

The announcement by David Dimbleby that he's stepping down from his role fronting Question Time has led to a raft of speculation about who might replace him.

Millennials are on track to become the first generation to suffer worse health than their parents in middle age, according to a study reported in the Times

It says people in their 20s and 30s have a higher risk of "lifestyle" diseases such as cancer, diabetes and heart disease in the future.

It cites high stress levels linked to insecure work, chronic loneliness and the long time they spend renting in shared accommodation as reasons. However the research by the Health Foundation also found the young have lower rates of smoking, alcohol and drug use.

And if you've failed to register that England are playing an important football match today the papers leave you in no doubt.

The Daily Star isn't worried ; it says the team is made up of "grafters and down to earth characters" who have a good chance of winning.

Seven of the squad hail from Yorkshire and the Daily Mirror hopes they will emulate the success of the 2012 Olympics - pointing out that if Yorkshire had been a country it would have finished 12th in the games.

Sun readers should never kiss anyone's boots, the paper says, but today they can make an exception.