Newspaper headlines: 'Everyone's a winner' and Meghan's dad gets his suit

Image caption "Now Give Us A Real Brexit" screams the Mail headline. Leading on Thursday's local elections in England, the Mail claims Leave voters "came out in force" for the Tories and "crushed a Labour breakthrough". It quotes Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson as saying the result showed the need to deliver a clean break from Brussels and avoid any compromise over the customs union.
Image caption The Times calls Labour's election performance "disappointing" and reports that MPs are calling for an inquest into what happened and why. Despite net gains, Labour failed to win any London councils from the Tories, which several colleagues blame on Mr Corbyn's "inaction over anti-Semitism". The paper also pictures Sir Paul McCartney, who was made a Companion of Honour by the Queen.
Image caption Still on the local elections, the i focuses on the downfall of UKIP, which lost more than 100 council seats - with the Conservatives swallowing up many of their votes in pro-Brexit areas. Theresa May has "survived the biggest test of public opinion since the general election, it adds. It also declares "everyone's a winner", citing Labour's solid - if unspectacular - gains.
Image caption The FT Weekend moves the headlines away from domestic politics to the ongoing trade stand-off between the Trump administration and China. It says the US has presented China with a list of hardline trade demands - including a demand that China cuts its trade surplus by £200bn, adding that the spectre of a trade war between the two countries continues to loom. It also suggests that hybrid cars such as Toyota Prius could be banned by 2040. It claims the latest clean air proposals could see up to 98% of current car models outlawed.
Image caption The Telegraph reports on a hormone injection that could help fight obesity. The monthly jab is being developed by British scientists at Imperial College, the paper says. Ongoing human trials have shown patients ate 30% less after treatment. The paper also echoes the Mail saying local election results show Mrs May has "a stronger mandate than ever" to press on with a clean break from the EU.
Image caption Staff working on the hotline set up to help the women affected by the breast cancer screening fiasco are inadequately trained, with little or no medical knowledge, reports the Guardian, following a tip-off. Call volumes rose from 5,000 on Wednesday to 10,000 on Friday. The paper's front-page image shows Britons basking in the sun as record-breaking bank holiday weather is forecast.
Image caption The Daily Express has an exclusive story about man who claims he was abused by a nun as a teenager. It pictures him meeting his daughter for the first time.
Image caption ITV presenter Holly Willoughby is on the front page of the Star. It reports that she and her This Morning co-star Phillip Schofield will join the cast of Coronation Street - to bring a much needed comic note to proceedings after fans complained that the storylines had become too dark.
Image caption On a lighter note, under the headline 'Suits You, Sir!', the Sun pictures Megan Markle's father being measured up for his royal wedding outfit near his Mexican home. It follows Friday's official announcement that 73-year-old Thomas Markle, a retired cinematographer, will walk his daughter down the aisle when she marries Prince Harry on 19 May.