Newspaper headlines: Hancock hangs on - but is it a 'Barnard Castle moment?'

Getty ImagesThe CCTV image of the Health Secretary, Matt Hancock - kissing and embracing his aide, Gina Coladangelo - is on most of the front pages.
"How can he cling on?" asks the Daily Mail, which says Boris Johnson is facing an "overwhelming clamour" to sack him.
It says there has been a "furious backlash" after Mr Hancock refused to quit for breaching Covid guidance.
"Boris backs Hancock" is the Daily Express's main headline, but adds that what it calls Mr Hancock's "steamy clinch" has caused anger throughout the nation.
The Daily Telegraph reports that he faces the sack if the affair turns into a 'Barnard Castle moment' - a reference to when Mr Johnson's chief adviser, Dominic Cummings, also breach the guidance.
It says the public's reaction is likely to determine his fate.
The Times's front page says the health secretary is "fighting for his job".
It has the results of a YouGov survey suggesting 49% of voters believe he should resign over the incident, with only 25% wanting him to stay.
Several titles, including the Independent and the i, say a separate poll by Savanta ComRes has found the public wants him to quit by a margin of 58 to 25.
A cartoon in the Times pictures a perspiring Mr Hancock in the Downing Street press room with lipstick on his collar - behind a podium with the slogan "hands, face, bottom".
A "cheat and a liar... so PM backs him" is the Daily Mirror's front-page headline, describing the Hancock revelations as a "scandal".
"Hopeless love rat backs hopeless love rat" is the Daily Star's headline.
Its front page also offers readers a cut-out mask of Mr Hancock's smiling face.
It describes this as a "God's gift to posh women face mask" - for anyone who isn't Brad Pitt.
The Daily Telegraph reports an urgent investigation has begun into who placed CCTV camera in Matt Hancock's office.
The paper understands he had no idea the camera was there, with government sources saying it was "unheard of" for cameras to be installed in ministers' offices.
The Daily Mail says that MI5 is being consulted, with the leak raising the prospect that ministers' movements and perhaps even the documents they handle could fall into the hands of Britain's enemies.
The Telegraph adds that the CCTV cameras used in the Department of Health - made by the Chinese company, Hikvision - are banned in the US because of national security concerns.
The Sun claims the footage came from a "disgusted" whistleblower.


It says the public school has signed an agreement with an academy trust, to open three highly selective state sixth-forms - in deprived northern areas.
Simon Henderson, who is Eton's headmaster, says they will blend its educational philosophy and rigorous curriculum with the ethos and approach of the Star Academies trust, whose schools it says are frequently named among the best in the country for pupil progress.
The paper says the precise location of three sixth-forms is yet to be determined, but they will all be in disadvantaged parts of the north or West Midlands, and open from 2024.
