The suspension of Cambridge Analytica’s boss dominates the front pages on Wednesday as the firm comes under mounting pressure over allegations of electoral interference.

The lead story on the front of The Times accuses a parent company of the firm of trying to “entrap a Caribbean politician”. Chief executive Alexander Nix has denied the company uses “entrapment, bribes or so-called honey-traps” following an undercover report by Channel 4 News.

The i, meanwhile, leads on Mark Zuckerberg, reporting the founder of the social media site has been called to Parliament to respond to claims that Cambridge Analytica carried out a so-called data grab on more than 50 million Facebook profiles in 2014.

The Financial Times leads with the same story, saying regulators are “ratcheting up the pressure” on Facebook.

The Guardian says Cambridge Analytica “boasted of playing a key role in bringing Donald Trump to power”. In a statement after Mr Nix’s suspension, the company said comments recorded in the secret filming by Channel 4 News and “other allegations” did not represent “the values or operations of the firm”.

Away from the undercover sting, Ant McPartlin continues to lead the tabloids after his arrest on suspicion of drink-driving and return to rehab. Under the headline “Dec’s Dilemma”, the Daily Mirror says the star’s presenting partner is agonising over his TV future without his long-time sidekick.

Its main story focuses on the news that Guernsey could pass laws to become the first place in the British Isles have a “suicide clinic”.

A downcast Dec Donnelly is also pictured on the front of The Sun. It leads on the findings of its own investigation on a YouTube app for youngsters, claiming it showed a video on how to make a gun.

The Daily Telegraph‘s leads on a British surgeon who believes the hacking of his computer after giving remote instructions on operations in Aleppo led to a hospital in Syria being bombed.

Radio 4’s Front Row presenter Kirsty Lang features on the front of the Metro after telling MPs she worked though cancer treatment after being asked to become self-employed.

And the Daily Express issues a rallying call to Jeremy Hunt, saying the Health Secretary has been urged to “deliver radical social care reform”.