Migrants rescued at sea wait to be transferred at the harbour of Algeciras on July 28 | Jorge Guerrero/AFP via Getty Images euro press review Migration back on Europe’s front pages Brexit and the Tour de France also make Monday’s papers.

Spain

El País wrote that new conservative leader Pablo Casado had “join[ed] the anti-immigration ranks” by adopting a “radicalized” posture on migration. El Mundo wrote of an “emergency” in the interior ministry after the arrival of around 10,500 migrants on Spanish soil. The paper quoted Casado saying it was “not possible, even for the welfare state, to host millions of Africans.”

Germany

Süddeutsche Zeitung’s and Die Tageszeitung’s front pages also focused on migration. SZ wrote that a migrant influx into Spain was causing the new government “distress.” TAZ focused on street protests in German cities against the criminalization of “private” rescues at sea. The paper featured photographs from the protests with the headline: “Here we stand as a society” and noted the “new movement” had even reached Dresden, the “PEGIDA capital.” FAZ said Foreign Minister Heiko Maas “fear[ed]” that the debate over the resignation of Mesut Özil, the national football team’s striker, would hurt “German prestige” abroad.

United Kingdom

Several papers ran pictures of the historic Tour de France win by Geraint Thomas, who on Sunday became the first Welsh national to take home the title. The Daily Telegraph led with Euroskeptic MPs’ criticism of Prime Minister Theresa May’s “kamikaze” approach to exiting the EU without a deal, while the Daily Express wrote about “fury” among Brexiteers over reports that a no-deal Brexit could spark a food supply crisis. The Times led with a report about animal abuse on farms. The Guardian wrote about allegations that the boss of the Institute of Economic Affairs think tank offered to introduce U.K. ministers working on Brexit to American donors seeking to influence the U.K.’s exit strategy. The FT reported that Germany’s Deutsche Bank has already relocated “almost half” of its euro clearing activities from London to Frankfurt.

France

Libération led with the headline: “Burning tomorrows,” reporting on rising temperatures around the world. The paper looked at the “dramatic consequences” of global warming on health and the environment. Le Figaro wrote that police were responding to “rising summer delinquency” by increasing their numbers in resorts and tourist cities. Regional daily La Dépêche wrote about the Tour de France with the headline: “Yet another tour with a British accent.”