15/06/2016 BBC News at Six


15/06/2016

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65 Tory MPs turn on George Osborne after he says leaving the EU

:00:00.:00:08.

would mean an emergency Budget and higher taxes.

:00:09.:00:13.

Leave MPs say they would vote him down but the Chancellor argues

:00:14.:00:18.

Quitting the EU would mean less money - billions less -

:00:19.:00:23.

and as the economy shrinks, so too would the cash

:00:24.:00:26.

This is utterly irresponsible in the last throes,

:00:27.:00:33.

because you're in a panic, in the Remain camp, to suddenly try

:00:34.:00:36.

That's not the way that politics should work.

:00:37.:00:45.

Do you mind not looking like that at me all the time?

:00:46.:00:47.

Tough-talking Sir Philip Green apologises to BHS workers

:00:48.:00:52.

and says he's ready to sort out their pension scheme.

:00:53.:00:55.

An alligator attack at a Disney resort in Florida.

:00:56.:00:57.

Police say there's no chance of finding a two-year-old boy alive.

:00:58.:01:02.

Concern for the safety of fans, as French police step up

:01:03.:01:04.

security before tomorrow's England-Wales match.

:01:05.:01:09.

Coming up later on BBC News, I'll have the day's action

:01:10.:01:12.

in Euro 2016 Sportsday, including the latest

:01:13.:01:15.

from the three home nations ahead of tomorrow's matches.

:01:16.:01:39.

Good evening and welcome to the BBC News at Six.

:01:40.:01:44.

A 65-strong group of Conservative MPs has questioned the Chancellor's

:01:45.:01:46.

future after his latest warning about leaving the European Union.

:01:47.:01:49.

George Osborne said an emergency Budget would be needed to fix

:01:50.:01:53.

what he called a ?30 billion black hole in the UK's finances.

:01:54.:01:58.

Mr Osborne said that would mean tax rises such as a 2p increase

:01:59.:02:02.

And there'd be ?15 billion of spending cuts that

:02:03.:02:08.

The Tory MPs say they would vote against such a Budget,

:02:09.:02:14.

making the Chancellor's position "untenable".

:02:15.:02:16.

Here's our political editor, Laura Kuenssberg.

:02:17.:02:28.

On land and almost sea, the referendum clashes are in full flow.

:02:29.:02:38.

And strange. Bob Geldof taking Nigel Farage on the Thames! Nigel, stop

:02:39.:02:45.

telling lies! It's all right for millionaires! Crowds and campaigners

:02:46.:02:52.

shouting the odds, too. You'll be more used to this. The Chancellor

:02:53.:02:57.

with a man who used to do his job for Labour, claiming if you voted to

:02:58.:03:01.

leave, a sudden deterioration in the country's anchor balance would mean

:03:02.:03:05.

whopping tax rises and cuts. -- bank balance. You've got a situation

:03:06.:03:12.

today when you've got a Conservative Chancellor and a Labour Chancellor

:03:13.:03:15.

telling people there will be a bit, in the public finances, that you

:03:16.:03:19.

would have to raise taxes and cut spending, and I tell you, there's

:03:20.:03:22.

only one thing worse than passing a Budget like that, it's not passing a

:03:23.:03:28.

Budget to solve the situation and sending the economy into a tailspin.

:03:29.:03:32.

But there's been furious backlash from those wanting out. They say he

:03:33.:03:41.

has gone too far. When you have today even the Leave campaign saying

:03:42.:03:46.

there will be an economic consequence, people need to know

:03:47.:03:49.

that before they passed that -- cast their vote. He claims he would have

:03:50.:03:53.

no choice but to deliver such bad news. Because he would have to fail

:03:54.:03:59.

a ?30 billion -- fill a ?30 billion hole in the books. But the chances

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of George Osborne standing on the steps with a Budget like that are

:04:05.:04:08.

slim. It would be almost impossible to get the support. But the message

:04:09.:04:11.

that number 11 wants to give is that the country votes to leave the EU,

:04:12.:04:17.

we will all pay one way or another. There are nearly 70 Tories who want

:04:18.:04:20.

out of the EU and they have claimed they will do fine. One MP told me,

:04:21.:04:27.

smart guy, stupid move. The Leave campaigners haven't made their views

:04:28.:04:31.

public but somewhat incredulous. This is no longer just about the

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referendum but George Osborne's authority, too. You have a chance

:04:35.:04:39.

coming out and irresponsibly trying to scare the public and even the

:04:40.:04:44.

markets. That is utterly wrong, I've never seen anything like it in 24

:04:45.:04:47.

years and he needs to think again and stop this nonsense at once. You

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are saying if he carried on like this, you would have to go? This is

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irresponsible. What is responsible is for a Chancellor to say, no

:04:56.:05:00.

matter what happens, Britain is good enough to forge its way. But they

:05:01.:05:03.

could be huge turbulence if we vote to leave. The outcome pay have

:05:04.:05:09.

talked about five new laws they would campaign for. It is almost

:05:10.:05:16.

like an alternative mini manifesto. This campaign has gone way beyond

:05:17.:05:21.

the ordinary, far past the usual insults and intrigue of politics,

:05:22.:05:24.

and now with a significant chunk of Tory MPs saying if the country votes

:05:25.:05:29.

out, they would try to oust George Osborne, it feels like there's a

:05:30.:05:34.

coup in waiting. The police even got involved as campaigns weren't just

:05:35.:05:37.

messing around on the river, but taking each other on. There is

:05:38.:05:40.

little sign of apathy is this decision approaches. Every awareness

:05:41.:05:42.

of how much it counts. Our economics editor,

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Kamal Amed, is here. Would the Chancellor really go ahead

:05:47.:05:50.

with this type of Budget? Well, they certainly try to make it

:05:51.:06:02.

look like a Budget. This is the document the Remain campaign brought

:06:03.:06:07.

out today. This is the active Budget from earlier in the year. This,

:06:08.:06:11.

admittedly, more flimsy. Economists do believe in the short-term the

:06:12.:06:15.

British economy would take a hit and that could affect the public

:06:16.:06:20.

finances and leaves a shortfall of about ?30 billion by 2020. Would any

:06:21.:06:24.

Budget need to be this brutal war in one go? Very unlikely. He could

:06:25.:06:30.

smooth borrowing, he could push tax rises into the future and public

:06:31.:06:35.

spending cuts as well. I think George Osborne knows he's in an

:06:36.:06:39.

utterly fierce fight. People close to him have told me this is all

:06:40.:06:44.

about undecided voters, the war over the wavering. They will choose and

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they will be the ones who make the decision on the joke -- June 23 and

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it's become very clear that those around George Osborne believe that

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the moment the economic argument is not cutting through to enough

:06:57.:06:58.

voters. Thank you. We know immigration is a big issue

:06:59.:07:01.

in the referendum debate, and today the Home Secretary,

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Theresa May, has told the BBC that there should be a look

:07:04.:07:06.

at further reforms in the free movement of people if Britain

:07:07.:07:09.

votes to stay in the EU. Speaking exclusively

:07:10.:07:11.

to our political editor Laura Kuenssberg, Ms May explained

:07:12.:07:13.

how she decided to back This is the latest in Laura's

:07:14.:07:16.

interviews with key figures In a world of loudmouths,

:07:17.:07:20.

she is a quiet politician. Don't mistake that for having

:07:21.:07:30.

nothing to say. For a while on the EU, though,

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it was unclear where Theresa May would pin her colours,

:07:33.:07:36.

which way she would go. Well, there were plenty of voices

:07:37.:07:38.

suggesting what I should do in this. Of course there were quite a lot

:07:39.:07:44.

of voices suggesting I should go But as I say, I approached this

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decision in the way I approach other Look at the facts

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and come to a view. When I put all that together

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and when I think about the potential risk to jobs, the uncertainties

:07:58.:08:00.

for our economy if we were to leave the European Union,

:08:01.:08:04.

when I think about the security, the discussions I've had

:08:05.:08:07.

within the EU, because I do believe But this campaign is about

:08:08.:08:10.

immigration as well. As Home Secretary,

:08:11.:08:15.

her responsibility. I completely understand why people

:08:16.:08:18.

are concerned about immigration. There is no silver bullet,

:08:19.:08:21.

there is no one thing you can do that is suddenly going to deal

:08:22.:08:25.

with all the problems people That includes leaving the EU,

:08:26.:08:27.

that is not a single But there is one big truth, though,

:08:28.:08:33.

here, which is as long as we are in the EU we cannot cap

:08:34.:08:37.

the numbers of people coming in here from other

:08:38.:08:40.

countries in Europe? There are some changes coming up

:08:41.:08:43.

in free movement rules. We should look at further reform

:08:44.:08:46.

in the future. What would you say to your

:08:47.:08:49.

colleagues who have been campaigning It is understandable that people

:08:50.:08:52.

feel very passionately about it. But when you said you wanted

:08:53.:08:59.

a serious and mature debate, it sounded a bit like you were telling

:09:00.:09:03.

them to grow up. No, what I was doing was setting

:09:04.:09:06.

out my approach to this campaign. She has stayed above the fray,

:09:07.:09:09.

but what happens after all these Do you think whatever happens,

:09:10.:09:12.

David Cameron will still be in a job Would you ever consider

:09:13.:09:21.

running for the job? Look, David I hope is going

:09:22.:09:27.

to carry on until 2020. As I said, there is no vacancy,

:09:28.:09:29.

Laura. Look, whatever I say

:09:30.:09:35.

to you is going to be taken this way There is no vacancy,

:09:36.:09:41.

I hope David is going to continue With a referendum so close,

:09:42.:09:45.

that is not clear at all. The billionaire businessman

:09:46.:09:50.

Sir Philip Green has apologised to staff of the collapsed retailer

:09:51.:09:59.

BHS, which he sold for ?1 last year. Referring to the company's massive,

:10:00.:10:04.

?500 million pension deficit, There were tense exchanges

:10:05.:10:14.

throughout the hearing, as our business editor,

:10:15.:10:22.

Simon Jack, reports. Putting together the pieces

:10:23.:10:24.

of a high-street failure. The person who knows how

:10:25.:10:26.

they all fit arrived for his moment 13 months later it collapsed

:10:27.:10:29.

and today he apologised. It didn't need to be like this

:10:30.:10:36.

and I just want to apologise to all the BHS people who have

:10:37.:10:39.

been involved in this, who are involved, and I hope that

:10:40.:10:42.

by the end of the morning they will hear everything and we can

:10:43.:10:45.

find some sensible solutions He sold the chain for just ?1

:10:46.:10:48.

to this man, Dominic Chappell, a former bankrupt with

:10:49.:10:54.

no retail experience. Sir Philip himself set out one

:10:55.:10:57.

of the key questions. Did we go out of our way

:10:58.:11:00.

intentionally to find somebody, anybody, in this case Chappell,

:11:01.:11:05.

to find somebody to end up I think hopefully three hours in,

:11:06.:11:09.

or however long it is, or three-and-a-half hours in,

:11:10.:11:19.

whatever it is, you can accept During a sometimes testy encounter

:11:20.:11:22.

he tried hard to control his temper Sir, do you mind not looking at me

:11:23.:11:28.

like that all the time? You just wanted to stare at me,

:11:29.:11:34.

it's just uncomfortable. Put your glasses back on, you look

:11:35.:11:40.

better with your glasses on. I don't like the way

:11:41.:11:43.

you are asking me the question. I am terribly sorry,

:11:44.:11:46.

I will rephrase it. Which bit of don't remember

:11:47.:11:48.

is difficult for you to listen to? He then blamed his own

:11:49.:11:53.

advisers on Sachs. If Mr Chappell had not passed

:11:54.:12:02.

Goldman Sachs' sniff test of credibility,

:12:03.:12:04.

would you have done a deal with him? We wouldn't be sitting

:12:05.:12:07.

here, absolutely not. 20,000 pensioners are facing cuts

:12:08.:12:08.

to their retirement income. It is resolvable, sortable,

:12:09.:12:11.

we will sort it, we will find a solution and I am going to give

:12:12.:12:16.

an assurance to the 20,000 pensioners that I am

:12:17.:12:20.

there to sort this. There wasn't enough detail

:12:21.:12:23.

today to reassure scheme I think the right thing to do

:12:24.:12:26.

would be to make sure that no one is any worse off

:12:27.:12:32.

because of the collapse of BHS. He says he has an affinity

:12:33.:12:36.

with the company after 15 years. Let's hope he has got

:12:37.:12:39.

a good moral compass, he's got the money to do it,

:12:40.:12:41.

and look after these Sir Philip's retail fortune is now

:12:42.:12:44.

in his wide's Monaco bank account and the committee

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wanted to know why there? Somebody suggested it and we went

:12:52.:12:54.

there, I wanted to put my children in school somewhere,

:12:55.:12:58.

two or three choices. We went there, had

:12:59.:13:01.

a look, met the people When did you find out

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that it had tax advantages? I think it is known,

:13:05.:13:10.

I don't think that's a secret. Sir Philip will be hoping he can

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disappear back there now, but there are still some pieces

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missing from this puzzle. A brief look at some of the day's

:13:18.:13:23.

other other news stories. The late broadcaster and former MP

:13:24.:13:26.

Sir Clement Freud has been accused of sexually abusing two girls

:13:27.:13:29.

in the 1940s and the 1970s. The allegations are made

:13:30.:13:33.

in tonight's edition of the ITV His widow said she was "deeply

:13:34.:13:35.

saddened and profoundly sorry CCTV footage of a boy

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who was hit by a drunk driver, but escaped with only cuts

:13:43.:13:47.

and bruises, has been The six-year-old was picking out

:13:48.:13:49.

sweets when the car smashed through the shop window

:13:50.:13:53.

near Manchester last month. The driver has been

:13:54.:13:56.

disqualified for three years. The former Olympic athlete

:13:57.:14:01.

Oscar Pistorius has appeared in court in South Africa

:14:02.:14:03.

without his prosthetic legs during a hearing to determine his

:14:04.:14:07.

sentence for murder. His lawyer recounted the night three

:14:08.:14:09.

years ago that he shot dead his girlfriend,

:14:10.:14:11.

Reeva Steenkamp. Prosecutors have asked for a minimum

:14:12.:14:14.

sentence of 15 years. Police in the US state of Florida

:14:15.:14:21.

say the search for a two-year-old boy who was snatched by an alligator

:14:22.:14:24.

at a hotel near Disney World is now The child was dragged

:14:25.:14:27.

into the water whilst paddling in a lagoon at the Disney-owned

:14:28.:14:32.

resort in Orlando. Parts of Disney World

:14:33.:14:34.

have been sealed off. All beaches in the resort

:14:35.:14:41.

have been closed. It follows the dramatic

:14:42.:14:44.

disappearance of a two-year-old boy as his family were

:14:45.:14:47.

relaxing by a lake here. The child was in the water,

:14:48.:14:50.

about a foot in the water, Father hears what is

:14:51.:14:53.

categorised as a splash. He goes and sees what is happening

:14:54.:14:59.

and he finds that his child basically is in the mouth

:15:00.:15:03.

of an alligator. The father goes to try to grab

:15:04.:15:08.

the child but the alligator gets the child, takes the child off

:15:09.:15:11.

into the water. Search and Rescue teams have been

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at work both in the air Trappers have caught and killed

:15:15.:15:19.

several alligators but have so far Well, they first said

:15:20.:15:24.

they were optimistic, but police now admit this is aobut

:15:25.:15:30.

finding a body. To at least give a devastated

:15:31.:15:33.

family the beginnings Aleem Maqbool, BBC News,

:15:34.:15:36.

in Orlando, Florida. More on the referendum now,

:15:37.:15:42.

and this week we're hearing The North East of England

:15:43.:15:46.

is a Labour heartland, but, like elsewhere,

:15:47.:15:50.

there are signs that some there are preparing

:15:51.:15:53.

to ignore their party Our political editor in the region,

:15:54.:15:57.

Richard Moss, has been talking Hartlepool, coastal, working,

:15:58.:16:01.

working class and Labour. The party has provided the town's MP

:16:02.:16:08.

for the last 50 years. The next dance is the Tiffany

:16:09.:16:12.

saunter. But Labour's push to stay in the EU

:16:13.:16:16.

does not seem to be in step Hannah Chapman will be dancing

:16:17.:16:20.

to a different tune on June 23. I want out and I have done

:16:21.:16:25.

from the start. Whatever the local Labour MP says,

:16:26.:16:28.

Jeremy Corbyn, Alan Johnson, And the majority of the dance class

:16:29.:16:35.

agrees. I believe we should

:16:36.:16:41.

make our own decisions. Everything we decide in this

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country is vetoed. We think we will be safer

:16:45.:16:49.

of and better off in. But perhaps younger working

:16:50.:16:57.

voters might give Remain This was a rare success for Remain

:16:58.:17:00.

in this town. Leave campaigners are certainly more

:17:01.:17:06.

buoyant, believing they are winning And it is not scientific,

:17:07.:17:10.

but we find it hard to find Remain supporters in a town that is

:17:11.:17:21.

desperate for jobs and investment. Do you know which way you will vote

:17:22.:17:24.

in the referendum? Leave without a doubt,

:17:25.:17:27.

no second thoughts in my mind. And hotel night porter Alan Hughes

:17:28.:17:29.

certainly believes his young family By the time my children

:17:30.:17:37.

are old enough to go and look for jobs, will there be jobs there

:17:38.:17:43.

when we are in an overpopulated Immigration has been

:17:44.:17:46.

lower here than in other That is true, but if the influx

:17:47.:17:51.

continues the way it is going, there has got to be an overspill

:17:52.:17:55.

somewhere and it will get here. The north-east is likely to be

:17:56.:17:58.

the first part of the country to declare its results in the early

:17:59.:18:01.

hours of Friday, June 24. So if Leave campaigners are right

:18:02.:18:04.

and they have won here, it will not be game, set and match,

:18:05.:18:07.

but it is likely to turn the current jitters amongst Labour MPs

:18:08.:18:11.

and Remain campaigners Thousands of England and Wales

:18:12.:18:12.

football fans are gathering in the city of Lens ahead

:18:13.:18:23.

of their Euro 2016 match tomorrow. There are concerns for their safety

:18:24.:18:27.

after recent clashes with Russian supporters,

:18:28.:18:30.

who have just watched their team lose to Slovakia

:18:31.:18:32.

in the nearby city of Lille. Thousands of football supporters

:18:33.:18:50.

here because of two big games taking place today and tomorrow. England

:18:51.:18:54.

and Wales tomorrow and Russia and Slovakia today. These riot police

:18:55.:18:59.

came face-to-face with England supporters in the last hour and tear

:19:00.:19:04.

gas was fired. The England fans tried to get out of this square up

:19:05.:19:08.

to other England fans looking to see what had happened. They are now

:19:09.:19:13.

being pushed back into the corner of this square. They are noisy on

:19:14.:19:17.

boisterous and the feeling I get from talking to some of them is that

:19:18.:19:22.

some of them are looking for trouble. It does not bode well for

:19:23.:19:26.

the rest of the evening. It is quite tense here at the moment. Those are

:19:27.:19:32.

the events of the pitch. Dan Rowan has the report about the events on

:19:33.:19:34.

He is the world's most expensive player, but to

:19:35.:19:37.

Gareth Bale's brilliance has inspired his country to their first

:19:38.:19:42.

And having helped them win their opening match,

:19:43.:19:46.

the Real Madrid star is relishing an international derby

:19:47.:19:49.

We know they have fantastic players, they have a good team.

:19:50.:19:52.

But come match day when you cross that white line, there's no friends.

:19:53.:20:04.

And as if to prove it, here is how many Englishmen Bale

:20:05.:20:07.

England would no doubt disagree, but having only managed a draw

:20:08.:20:12.

in their first game, manager Roy Hodgson admits his team

:20:13.:20:14.

now needs this more than their opponents.

:20:15.:20:16.

They are under less pressure because normally when you win a game

:20:17.:20:20.

and three teams qualify from the group, you are basically

:20:21.:20:23.

qualified the minute you win a game, and they have won one

:20:24.:20:25.

So no doubt that the answer to that question is they are

:20:26.:20:31.

So what could happen in this, the biggest home nations clash

:20:32.:20:37.

since Paul Gascoigne inspired England to a famous win over

:20:38.:20:39.

When that first whistle goes, players will be at it, there will be

:20:40.:20:45.

no favours done, you're representing your countries here.

:20:46.:20:47.

But I just feel Wales have the slight advantage,

:20:48.:20:52.

simply because they have got a win on the board.

:20:53.:20:56.

Having lost their first match, meanwhile, Northern Ireland have

:20:57.:20:59.

been preparing to take on Ukraine tomorrow in Lyon.

:21:00.:21:02.

But with tens of thousands of British fans gathering

:21:03.:21:05.

in northern France amid a highly visible security operation,

:21:06.:21:08.

the focus both on and off the field will be on a game that has captured

:21:09.:21:12.

the imagination ever since the draw was made.

:21:13.:21:22.

And now it is time for the web. On a cloudy and wet is not the headline

:21:23.:21:31.

you want for June in Scotland. That is what you got my relentless rain

:21:32.:21:34.

piling in off the east coast. In Central and in parts of England

:21:35.:21:44.

and Wales we saw plenty of sharp showers developing in the afternoon.

:21:45.:21:48.

The best of the dry weather was in East Anglia and the South East. Not

:21:49.:21:53.

too much interruption for the tennis at Queens. The rain is easing and

:21:54.:22:01.

moving a bit further north in Scotland. It will be a cloudy night

:22:02.:22:05.

with poor visibility and fog around first thing tomorrow morning. But it

:22:06.:22:13.

is a repeat across England and Wales because we see plenty more showers

:22:14.:22:17.

developing in the middle of the afternoon and some of them are

:22:18.:22:22.

pretty sharp. The rain in Scotland drifts a bit further north, so not

:22:23.:22:26.

quite a dismal day, but disappointingly cool. Some

:22:27.:22:31.

brightness in the north of England, but it is another day of sunny

:22:32.:22:35.

spells and scattered showers and some of the showers are heavy. If

:22:36.:22:41.

you get caught up in them, it is pretty measurable. Up to 19 degrees

:22:42.:22:46.

if you are lucky. But there is light at the end of the tunnel. The

:22:47.:22:54.

low-pressure drifts South and on Friday there is persistent rain

:22:55.:22:58.

clinging onto Eastern Scotland and North East England, but the weekend

:22:59.:23:00.

looks better.

:23:01.:23:04.

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