Tuesday newspaper round-up: RBS, David Cameron, Ed Miliband

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Sharecast News | 31 Mar, 2015

Updated : 07:17

According to The Times, Rory Cullinan, executive chairman of RBS’s corporate and institutional bank, is to leave the bank after it was revealed he was sending social media messages complaining about "bored" meetings.

Prime minister David Cameron has promised to create an extra 1,000 new jobs every day if he wins the upcoming election, The Telegraph reported.

Ed Miliband will face mutiny threats from his fellow MPs if he goes on with his planned public spending cuts after the election, wrote The Times.

Crisis talks were held Monday night over the future of a £20m criminal investigation into newspaper payments for information called Operation Elveden, according to The Times.

Britain will offer millions of dollars in tax breaks to digital-game developers in an effort to attract talent, wrote The Wall Street Journal.

David Cameron’s claim that working families will fact an average tax rise of £3,000 if Labour becomes elected has been slammed as "unhelpful and of little value" by a leading UK think tank, according to The Guardian.

The next government needs to radically reform the UK’s approach to energy efficiency as previous governments have drastically failed, The Guardian reported.

China’s Navy expansion has concerned the US as its government has become split on whether to view Beijing as a naval partner or future adversary, according to The Wall Street Journal.

MI6 chief Alex Younger has claimed the secret intelligence service is in a "technology arms race" with terrorists and criminals, The Guardian reported.

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