Newspaper headlines: Theresa May 'defiant' over leadership

Image caption The Express dubs Theresa May "defiant" after she pledged she was "in this for the long term" when asked about the possibility of former Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson trying to take her job. The newspaper also reports that one of her senior officials also claimed the government was "closing in" on a Brexit deal with Brussels.
Image caption Mrs May's comments also make the front page of the Guardian - as does the photo of her dancing in South Africa. According to the paper, the PM also appeared to suggest she was relieved Mr Johnson had resigned, saying: "I was very pleased Boris was foreign secretary for the period that he was foreign secretary". The Guardian says Mr Johnson remains a "serious threat to May".
Image caption The grassroots Conservative Party - as well as the leadership - is the focus of the Times' top story. It reports that some pro-EU Tory MPs have seen rising numbers of applications to join local branches of the party. Some fear the influx is from UKIP supporters hoping to replace Mrs May with someone who is more pro-Brexit.
Image caption Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn and the anti-Semitism row features on the Telegraph front, as former chief rabbi Lord Sacks compared Mr Corbyn's comments about British Zionists to Enoch Powell's infamous "Rivers of Blood" speech. The paper says it is the strongest criticism yet of Mr Corbyn by a senior Jewish figure. Labour said the comparison with Enoch Powell is "absurd and offensive".
Image caption Lord Sacks' comments, which he made during an interview with the New Statesman, are also splashed on page one of the Mail, which calls it a "major escalation" of the ongoing Labour anti-Semitism row. According to the paper, Lord Sacks accused Mr Corbyn of suggesting Jews were "not fully British". The video clip of Mr Corbyn's remarks, from 2013, was published by the Mail last week.
Image caption The Metro leads with quotes from the head of the Police Federation in London, who has said attacks on police are part of a "breakdown of society". It comes after footage emerged on social media showing two police officers in a McDonalds in Hackney, east London, being kicked by a crowd of people as they tried to arrest someone.
Image caption The top story for the Financial Times is about the pensions watchdog, which fears "overly generous" lump sum payouts to people in retirement - instead of spreading their pension over several years - could be putting pension schemes at risk. The Pensions Regulator has urged 14 company retirement schemes to review their cash sum offers. Meanwhile, Theresa May's dancing in South Africa is the front page picture.
Image caption A health story is given top billing by the i, which reports a new method of reading routine heart scans could predict fatal heart attacks years in advance. The first major trial of the new technology - which involved 3,900 patients in Germany - has proved successful.
Image caption Gordon Ramsay's offer to a teenage aspiring chef is the Star's splash on Wednesday. The paper says the TV chef came to the "rescue" after Louis Makepeace, 18, who has dwarfism, claims bosses at his college discriminated against him because of his size.
Image caption The Mirror leads with what it calls a world exclusive, after it traced a pair of twins who were once at the centre of a huge international internet adoption scandal in 2001. The two girls were born in the US and sold to a British couple for £8,000 when they were six months old. Now, the sisters are 18 and studying at a university in the US, the Mirror reports.
Image caption The Sun reports on the death of 29-year-old Leah Cambridge, from Leeds. The mother-of-three collapsed shortly after the start of a £3,000 operation, the newspaper claims. It says the clinic has been used by stars of reality TV show The Only Way Is Essex. The clinic did not respond to requests for comment, the Sun says.

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