Newspaper headlines: Corbyn's Brexit 'neutrality' and the 'Duke of nothing'

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REUTERS/Peter Nicholls Duke of York and Queen ride horses in grounds of Windsor CastleREUTERS/Peter Nicholls
The Duke of York and the Queen were spotted horse-riding in the grounds of Windsor Castle

Most of the papers reflect on last night's special election edition of BBC Question Time.

And if you're looking for a winner, the Telegraph declares it was the punters in the studio.

The i says the scrutiny to which the four party leaders were subjected was a breath of fresh air in this campaign, and it helped that the audience were switched on, and in some cases, pretty angry.

Quentin Letts in the Times says it was a political version of the X Factor, although he acknowledges that BBC ratings managers must have been beating their heads in despair that the SNP's Nicola Sturgeon was second up in the two-hour show.

The tempo dropped like a shot partridge, he says.

A week on from the Duke of York's much-criticised television interview, the headlines surrounding Prince Andrew have not improved.

The i newspaper labels him the "Duke of nothing".

The Daily Express claims the last vestiges of his life as a working member of the Royal Family were collapsing around him after he reportedly parted company with his flagship business project, Pitch@Palace, because of the controversy surrounding his links to the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Several papers carry pictures of the prince out horse-riding with the Queen in the grounds of Windsor Castle - a scene interpreted by the Daily Mail and the Mirror as a defiant show of support by the monarch.

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Blue line

"End of GP home visit" is the Daily Mail's front-page headline after family doctors voted to scrap what has been a cornerstone of general practice for decades.

They argue that going to see patients is too time-consuming.

The paper says doctors will now lobby the NHS to abandon their contractual obligation to carry out home visits, leaving paramedics or other health professionals to do them instead.

HRAUN/Getty Images Labrador puppiesHRAUN/Getty Images
There's definitely seven pups here - but does one dog year really equal seven human years?

Finally, the Times says experts have debunked the idea that one dog year is equivalent to seven for a human.

Instead, research suggests that Labradors, for example, hurtle into middle age before they reach their third birthday, but that a dog's rate of ageing slows over time.