The Sunday Times keeps its focus on the PM, reporting that Sir Keir will vow to tackle the cost of living crisis next week in an attempt to pivot attention away from the embattled chancellor. The PM will pledge to scrap "misguided" regulations and root out unforeseen costs in the country's economy, the paper says.The Budget's impact on working families leads the Sunday Express. The paper cites a new report that says working families with three children will need to earn £71,000 to match the welfare benefits of a similar jobless household as a result of Reeves scrapping the two-child benefit cap.The Observer fills its front page with a black and white tribute to playwright Tom Stoppard, who has died aged 88. The paper also features a famous quote from Stoppard's play Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead: "Words, words. They're all we have to go on."The Independent shifts its attention to the war in Ukraine, spotlighting an interview with a Russia expert and former top White House adviser. Fiona Hill, a security adviser during Donald Trump's first administration, warns that Russian President Vladimir Putin is "manipulating" the US leader and "doesn't want peace".Moving on to entertainment news, the Sunday Mirror previews an interview with I'm a Celebrity contestant Alex Scott. Scott told the paper of her concern when her partner, singer Jess Glynne, wasn't there to meet her when she was voted out of the Jungle. Glynne's mother had suffered a stroke and required urgent surgery.In other TV news, hit BBC crime drama This City has been struck by real-life criminals, the Daily Star reports. The paper says a crew member had his room ransacked and personal belongings stolen while the series was filming its second series in Spain.Finally, the Sun splashes its front page with an interview with TV personality Freddy Brazier's former partner. Holly Swinburn details their troubled relationship, telling the paper: "Enough is enough, I don't' know if he can change."