PM dominates front pages as party problems persist and Covid rules return
Further measures to combat the Omicron variant, including the return of work-from-home guidance, have been announced.

Boris Johnson features on the front page of every national newspaper on Thursday, with most depicting a premier under pressure due to his handling of developments over allegations of a rule-breaking Downing Street Christmas party.
The 57-year-old also comes in for criticism for unveiling new tighter pandemic measures.
The Daily Mail and The Sun highlight an apparent double standard over the new restrictions, with the former using the headline āOne rule for them, new rules for the rest of usā and the latter mocking up Mr Johnson as the Grinch instructing the public to āDo as I say.. not as I Christmas doā.
Mail columnist Sarah Vine questions if Allegra Stratton who resigned on Wednesday, has been held to a higher account than former Downing St staffer Dominic Cummings or other colleagues.
āWhere is Ed Oldfield, the man who threw her that question, in all of this? Why does it always have to be the woman who carries the can for the mistakes of men?ā Ms Vine asks.
The Sunās editorial lists numerous Government embarrassments including Mr Cummingsās eyesight-testing trip to Barnard Castle and the bungled parts of the Foreign Officeās evacuation of Kabul.
āTo the public mind, itās madness and amounts to a failure of leadership by the PM that cannot and must not continue,ā it writes.
To both deny there was a party and say that any party did not breach the rules failed logic and propriety
The Daily Telegraphās splash covers the āimmediate backlashā to the āirrationalā new curbs, while columnist Allister Heath adds that the situation is still salvageable for Mr Johnson if he acts quickly.
āThis is an appalling state of affairs: the country cannot be left rudderless,ā Mr Heath writes.
āIt is not too late for Johnson: many prime ministers have bounced back from far worse. But for the first time, his grip on power is starting to look shaky, and his MPs are openly discussing a post-Johnson future.
āHe needs to act decisively to stop the rot, and to rebuild No 10 before the country is again engulfed in a traumatic Covid crisis.ā
The PM is quoted in The Times as denying a suggestion by Tory MP William Wragg that he had introduced the new restrictions as a political ādiversionā.
The paperās leader piece focuses on Mr Johnson for failing to use ācommon senseā with the shifting narrative provided to the press about the alleged illegal revelry.
āTo both deny there was a party and say that any party did not breach the rules failed logic and propriety,ā the editorial says.
āThe Prime Minister used to say he could guarantee this Christmas would be better than the last. It is unlikely that anyone in Downing Street is feeling festive at the moment, nor should they,ā it added.
The PM has a softer place to land on the front of the Daily Express where he touts Plan B as offering the best chance for a āclose to normalā Christmas.
But it is a different story inside the paper, where columnist Leo McKinstry writes: āWhat makes this far bigger than any previous furores that have temporarily engulfed Johnson is the depth of public indignation.
āDecent, law-abiding Britons who obeyed the guidelines, avoided social gatherings and refrained from meeting loved ones are furious at the blatant hypocrisy at the heart of Government.ā
Mr McKinstry added that Plan BĀ would serve as a useful distraction for Mr Johnson ābut the events of this week will make it harder for him to persuade the nation to accept new controlsā.
Jason Beattie, the head of politics at the Daily Mirror which broke the story of last Decemberās allegedly illicit parties at No 10, said the results of recent by-elections would not give Mr Johnson much confidence for the future.
āThe common theme behind all these scandals is Johnsonās arrogant belief that he is above the rules,ā Mr Beattie writes.
āWhile the Tories were comfortably ahead in the polls he was able to get away with it.
āBut recent by-elections show voters are starting to turn against the Conservatives.
āIt is probably too early to write Johnsonās obituary ā but this week may have sown the seeds of his demise.ā