The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Who said it?

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“It is sadly likely that a government will again need to ask the citizens of this country to follow rules it will be difficult to comply with and to make sacrifices which will be hard to bear, in order to serve or preserve the greater good. The collective consequenc­es of those citizens declining to do so may again be severe” - Conservati­ve former minister Jeremy Wright calls for the prime minister to resign.

“We still seem to be in denial. It’s time to shake off this partisan Stockholm syndrome, I believe. Our party brand is suffering. We will lose the next election on the current trajectory as reflected in recent elections” - Tory MP Tobias Ellwood, chairman of the Commons defence committee. “No one is kicking off and then all of a sudden tear gas starts getting thrown at us. All of a sudden the pepper spray starts coming out from the top, right around the gates, and all those types of things. And people are panicking. There were boys there. Young kids were in there. People were trying to hold up their kids” - Radio presenter Roman Kemp details the moment he was tear gassed ahead of the Champions League final in France at the weekend. “I came to Paris for the match and the second thing I planned to do was to see the Mona Lisa. Some guy dressed as an old woman on a wheelchair attacked it with a cake. What were the odds this would happen?” - Liverpool FC fan Klevis.

“He is her father so he has a right to reach out to her. He has been very honest and open in those feelings and the door is wide open” - The Duchess of Sussex’s half-sister Samantha Markle on the opportunit­y for Meghan to privately reconnect with their father.

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