Possible charges against Conor McGregor and the candidates for the Presidential election make the front pages of Sunday's papers.
The Sunday Independent reveals the DPP are weighing up if Conor McGregor should be charged over tweets related to the Dublin riots.

The Irish Sunday Mirror leads with tributes paid by Michael Currath following the passing of George Foreman.

The Irish Daily Mail reveals Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil are set to reveal their candidates early as a way to stop Conor McGregor running.

The Sunday World leads with Glen Ward named as gang boss Mr Flashy following a gun charge.

The Business Post reveals the huge spike in High Court cases against housing projects.

British papers

The papers on Sunday are led by a variety of political stories.
The Daily Telegraph reports Chancellor Rachel Reeves is set to order the civil service to save £2 billion per year, putting thousands of jobs at risk.
📰The front page of the Sunday Telegraph:
'Reeves takes axe to Civil Service'#TomorrowsPapersToday pic.twitter.com/njuI5OdFxL— The Telegraph (@Telegraph) March 23, 2025
Meanwhile, The Observer writes living standards of UK families are set to fall by 2030, with those on the lowest incomes declining twice as fast as middle and high-income earners.
THE OBSERVER: All families 'to be worse off by 2030' as poor bear the brunt #TomorrowsPapersToday pic.twitter.com/UFAh9NVoNa
— Alfie Tobutt (@AlfieTobutt) March 22, 2025
Kemi Badenoch is charging the taxpayer £400 per month for council tax on her second home, Sunday People reports.
SUNDAY PEOPLE: Fury at Kemi's council tax claim #TomorrowsPapersToday pic.twitter.com/8Zd9qXubOu
— Alfie Tobutt (@AlfieTobutt) March 22, 2025
The Sunday Express says schools and housing markets have been overwhelmed by an influx of refugees.
SUNDAY EXPRESS: Asylum crisis wrecking our communities #TomorrowsPapersToday pic.twitter.com/sDwGk00JMa
— Alfie Tobutt (@AlfieTobutt) March 22, 2025
The Sunday Times leads on thousands of students being suspected of claiming hundreds of millions of pounds from Britain’s university loans system.
THE SUNDAY TIMES: Revealed: the giant fraud in student loans #TomorrowsPapersToday pic.twitter.com/rOBX9KbyEO
— Alfie Tobutt (@AlfieTobutt) March 22, 2025
Police bosses told officers to withdraw from the gates of Downing Street during 2020’s Black Lives Matter protests amid fears demonstrators could grab their weapons, according to the Mail on Sunday.
SCOTTISH MAIL ON SUNDAY: SNP's broken promise over £2m drug room #TomorrowsPapersToday pic.twitter.com/96SHtyjumO
— Alfie Tobutt (@AlfieTobutt) March 22, 2025
The Sunday Mirror splashes on comments from Stephen Lawrence’s father, who has urged one of his son’s killers to name the other people involved in the 1993 murder.
SUNDAY MIRROR: Now name my son's killers #TomorrowsPapersToday pic.twitter.com/yzwI7phjp1
— Alfie Tobutt (@AlfieTobutt) March 22, 2025
The Sun on Sunday leads on Eamonn Holmes and Ruth Langsford’s relationship breakdown.
Tomorrow's front page: Ruth's phone fury at Eamonn https://t.co/yWJEnokYTU pic.twitter.com/g825N2czgQ
— The Sun (@TheSun) March 22, 2025
Lastly, the Daily Star Sunday says a million Britons snore so loud they wake up their next-door neighbours.
Sunday’s front page: Horror snorey#TomorrowsPapersTodayhttps://t.co/1mZlpvVKlv pic.twitter.com/Qi1xqWHnIh
— Daily Star (@dailystar) March 22, 2025