02/11/2016 BBC News at Six


02/11/2016

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Murders, assaults and self-harming - prison officers issue a warning

:00:11.:00:12.

As official figures show that violence in prisons continues

:00:13.:00:18.

continues to rise, ministers hold urgent talks.

:00:19.:00:20.

The prisons are a bloodbath at the moment.

:00:21.:00:23.

They're causing mass hysteria for both our staff and prisoners.

:00:24.:00:25.

We'll be asking about government plans for prison reform.

:00:26.:00:32.

England and Scotland players want to wear poppies

:00:33.:00:38.

on for their match on Armistice Day - Fifa says it's against the rules.

:00:39.:00:42.

We want our players to be able to wear those poppies.

:00:43.:00:45.

And I have to say to Fifa, that before they start

:00:46.:00:47.

telling us what to do, they jolly well ought

:00:48.:00:50.

Asda apologises after a BBC undercover investigation finds home

:00:51.:00:57.

delivery crates as dirty as a kitchen floor.

:00:58.:01:00.

With less than a week to polling day in the US election,

:01:01.:01:04.

after all the twists and turns, we will be looking at what these two

:01:05.:01:10.

candidates still have to do to become the 45th president.

:01:11.:01:16.

pioneering surgery after suffering terrible burns

:01:17.:01:19.

Leicester look to make more history tonight.

:01:20.:01:30.

in the knockout stages of the Champions League.

:01:31.:01:49.

Good evening and welcome to the BBC News at Six.

:01:50.:01:52.

The conditions in English and Welsh prisons has been likened

:01:53.:01:55.

to a bloodbath by the head of the Prison Officers Association.

:01:56.:01:58.

That stark assessment comes as the association has been

:01:59.:02:01.

holding urgent talks with the Justice Secretary,

:02:02.:02:10.

Liz Truss, about tackling increasing levels of violence

:02:11.:02:11.

The government's set to unveil its plans

:02:12.:02:14.

Our Home Affairs Correspondent June Kelly has more.

:02:15.:02:22.

Prison works. The old conservative mantra repeated a few years ago by

:02:23.:02:32.

Theresa May. But in some jails, this is Wandsworth, south London, earlier

:02:33.:02:37.

this year, the government is facing an explosive combination of staff

:02:38.:02:42.

shortages, violence and drug abuse. And some inmates are turning to the

:02:43.:02:46.

latest technology using drones to smuggle inbound items. The basket

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attached to this trial was carrying a consignment of this synthetic drug

:02:53.:02:56.

Spies and mobile phones. It was intercepted. The prison officers

:02:57.:03:02.

Association says the situation is at crisis point. Today they were set to

:03:03.:03:07.

take part in an unofficial walk-out. It was called off after the Justice

:03:08.:03:11.

Secretary agreed to an urgent meeting with PO PO a leaders this

:03:12.:03:18.

afternoon. Can I ask you whether meeting? Prisons are a bloodbath at

:03:19.:03:22.

the moment, they are causing mass hysteria for staff and prisoners,

:03:23.:03:26.

everyone is in a really bad way. Prisoners are on their knees and we

:03:27.:03:30.

hope the Justice Secretary can give some positive news for our members

:03:31.:03:35.

and prisoners are like. Today the BBC obtained a letter from an inmate

:03:36.:03:39.

at Pentonville where a prisoner was stabbed to death two weeks ago. He

:03:40.:03:44.

writes, a wing was just locked down again because after ten o'clock

:03:45.:03:48.

there were two violent incidents involving weapons. One involved what

:03:49.:03:52.

looked like a kitchen knife with a blade of 10-12 inches. I have

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frequently seen an individual set upon by half a dozen attackers in

:03:58.:04:01.

the exercise yard. This was a fight over drugs in a prison yard. Rival

:04:02.:04:07.

gangs and one person ended up with stab wounds. Current levels of

:04:08.:04:11.

prison violence, drug taking and self harm shame us all. The words of

:04:12.:04:17.

David Cameron nearly one year ago. While the political front line has

:04:18.:04:20.

changed in the last 12 months those at the sharp end in the present

:04:21.:04:24.

service have watched and experienced the situation simply getting worse.

:04:25.:04:29.

The latest figures show that over the past year, there were 107 self

:04:30.:04:40.

inflicted deaths. That is up 13%. 22,775 assaults, up 34% and 5954

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attacks on staff, up by 43%. Tomorrow there will be a big

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announcement from the Justice Secretary on the future of prisons

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in England and Wales. Tonight at the end of their talks the prison

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officers Association said it would mean nothing without safety

:05:00.:05:04.

guarantees for all those on the inside, prisoners and staff. And

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June Kelly is with me now. We are hearing about the prison reforms

:05:08.:05:13.

tomorrow from the government, what should we expect? This should be

:05:14.:05:17.

interesting, the first major announcement by Liz trust is Justice

:05:18.:05:21.

Secretary. We want to see if she will continue their work of her

:05:22.:05:27.

predecessor Michael Grove, seen as a reformer. She says this will be the

:05:28.:05:31.

biggest overhaul in prisons in England and Wales for a generation

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and she has spoken of ?1 million earmarked for new prisons but the

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big issue for people at the coal face, the governors and the prison

:05:40.:05:44.

officers as we heard is staffing levels. And what they say is never

:05:45.:05:47.

mind the long term plans, we cannot do this job unless we have more

:05:48.:05:53.

people and we need them now. The government said that one of the

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difficulties they have is, while they can recruit staff, sometimes

:05:58.:06:01.

they cannot keep them. So the challenge for everyone at the

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Ministry of Justice is to make this a job that people want to go into

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and then want to stay in. Thank you very much. Thank you.

:06:10.:06:12.

Two children and a man have been found dead in a house

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Police were called to the residence last night,

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A woman was taken to hospital where she is in a stable condition.

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Our correspondent, Dan Johnson, reports.

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David Stokes, a 43-year-old father of two young boys. Detectives are

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now trying to work out how he and his sons ended up losing their

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lives. Adam was 11 years old, Matthew was five. This is their

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house, where police were called at 930 last night after neighbours

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reported disturbance. Negotiators were brought in and the stand-off

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lasted until the early hours. A woman, believed to be David 's wife

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Sally, was taken to hospital and is still being treated. The officers

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entered the address found a male who has been pronounced dead within the

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address. Tragically and very dramatically the officers, in

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searching the address, have also found two deceased children. At this

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stage the inquiries are at a very early stage and we are trying to

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understand what happened last night in but also to understand the

:07:20.:07:24.

circumstances leading these deaths. Police say it's still too early to

:07:25.:07:28.

confirm how they died but they are not looking for anyone else. They

:07:29.:07:32.

believe the key to the investigation is understanding fully what went

:07:33.:07:35.

wrong here last night and in the lead up to and what tore a family

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apart. Because police had contact with the family here last night

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officials from the Independent Police Complaints Commission are now

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overseeing this investigation. Neighbours have described this as a

:07:50.:07:52.

nice family and they are completely stunned by what has happened in the

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last 24 hours. They are struggling to understand what can have resulted

:07:57.:08:01.

in a father and his two young boys ending up dead in the family home.

:08:02.:08:02.

Thank you. Environmental campaigners have

:08:03.:08:05.

won their latest legal battle to force the government to improve

:08:06.:08:07.

plans to deal with harmful The High Court has ruled

:08:08.:08:10.

that the government must Campaigners from ClientEarth argued

:08:11.:08:13.

that the current plan would not The Department for the Environment

:08:14.:08:16.

said it accepted the judgement. Our Science Editor David

:08:17.:08:21.

Shukman joins me now. David, just how significant the

:08:22.:08:31.

victory is this for the environmental campaigners?

:08:32.:08:38.

It is incredibly embarrassing for ministers. The second time in two US

:08:39.:08:44.

courts have ruled against them, today the High Court said government

:08:45.:08:48.

plans to reduce traffic pollution don't go far enough and are not

:08:49.:08:51.

moving quickly enough. We are talking about pollution that you

:08:52.:08:56.

cannot see but can do real damage to your health, nitrogen dioxide. A

:08:57.:09:00.

problem in London and in dozens of other places around the UK. The

:09:01.:09:04.

government hopes to tread to clean up. It said it would by 2020 or

:09:05.:09:13.

2025, the court said, not soon enough. The environment ministry,

:09:14.:09:19.

Defra, says it will listen to the court judgment and not to challenge

:09:20.:09:21.

it and look at its options closely which means it must come up with a

:09:22.:09:23.

robust plan pretty thank you. Theresa May has described football's

:09:24.:09:28.

world governing body, Fifa, as "utterly outrageous" for saying

:09:29.:09:30.

it would be against its rules for England and Scotland

:09:31.:09:33.

footballers to wear poppies during their World Cup qualifier

:09:34.:09:35.

match on Armistice Day. Our Sports Correspondent Richard

:09:36.:09:38.

Conway is outside Wembley. Richard? George, when England play

:09:39.:09:50.

Scotland here on Armistice Day and there a full range of commemorations

:09:51.:09:54.

planned, both England and Scotland want to wear a poppy on their shirt

:09:55.:09:59.

or on an armband. Sheaffer say it is against their rules. Both sides

:10:00.:10:04.

refuse to change the position -- Fifa say it is against their rules.

:10:05.:10:08.

And today the Prime Minister got involved.

:10:09.:10:15.

The football Association believed a deal of players displaying the poppy

:10:16.:10:22.

had been brokered in 2011. England, Scotland and Wales asked Fifa to be

:10:23.:10:26.

able to wear the remembrance symbol on their shirts or an armband when

:10:27.:10:31.

they play on, or close to Armistice Day later this month. But speaking

:10:32.:10:35.

to the BBC tonight the secretary-general of the governing

:10:36.:10:39.

body said the rules would not be changed. Britain is not the only

:10:40.:10:47.

country has been suffering from the result of war. Syria is one example.

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My own continent has been torn by war for years. And the only question

:10:53.:11:01.

would be why are we making an exception for just one country and

:11:02.:11:05.

not the rest of the world? The row reached the House of Commons today

:11:06.:11:09.

with the Prime Minister making her feelings on the issue and football's

:11:10.:11:14.

world governing body abundantly clear. I think the stance that has

:11:15.:11:17.

been taken by Fifa is utterly outrageous. Our footballers want to

:11:18.:11:24.

recognise and respect those who have given their lives. Is my our safety

:11:25.:11:31.

and security. I think it is absolutely right that they should be

:11:32.:11:35.

able to do so. Premier League teams are free to display the poppy but

:11:36.:11:39.

national teams must stick to the Fifa rules which ban any symbols of

:11:40.:11:44.

political or religious significance on their clothes. The three home

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football associations argue that the poppy does not have political

:11:49.:11:51.

connotations. Talks will continue between all parties this evening at

:11:52.:11:56.

Wembley but with Fifa showing no sign of backing down it is believed

:11:57.:12:00.

the FA are increasingly minded to defy the governing body and risk

:12:01.:12:05.

being punished. Richard Conway, BBC News, Wembley.

:12:06.:12:09.

It seems some customers of the Asda chain received rather more

:12:10.:12:12.

than their groceries when they used the supermarket's home

:12:13.:12:14.

BBC One's Watchdog programme carried out an undercover investigation

:12:15.:12:17.

after whistleblowers and customers raised concerns.

:12:18.:12:18.

Tests of bacteria levels on some crates found some were "equivalent

:12:19.:12:21.

Asda is one of the biggest providers of home shopping and

:12:22.:12:32.

promises customers they can sit back and relax while their personal

:12:33.:12:35.

shoppers pick and pack the items as carefully as you would.

:12:36.:12:38.

But BBC Watchdog has heard from a number of

:12:39.:12:40.

whistle-blowers from the company who raised

:12:41.:12:41.

concerns about the state of

:12:42.:12:48.

the crates, or totes as they call them, that shopping

:12:49.:13:00.

The conditions of the totes are not monitored.

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And I can tell they are dirty and I wear gloves.

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Because I'm scared of catching something.

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Raw meat, fresh vegetables, they are all being

:13:11.:13:12.

Another whistle-blower got in touch with

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photos of what he said he regularly sees on shift.

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There is mould on a lot of the totes.

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But you are not talking one or two, you

:13:20.:13:24.

Some of the things that these are rolled in,

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the mould, the dirt, it is not stuff I would feel comfortable

:13:28.:13:30.

A recent change in the law has also made it all the

:13:31.:13:34.

more important that groceries are delivered in clean crates.

:13:35.:13:36.

In October last year England joined the

:13:37.:13:41.

rest of the UK and introduced a 5p plastic bag charge.

:13:42.:13:43.

Since then, the number of plastic bags used has

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fallen by 85% and if you do the shopping

:13:46.:13:47.

online you can cut out the

:13:48.:13:49.

Watchdog tested out Asda's home shopping

:13:50.:13:54.

service, ordering deliveries to ten houses across the country.

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One crate from each delivery was swabbed and

:13:57.:13:59.

sent to a government accredited microbiology lab for analysis.

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Out of our ten orders, just one delivery

:14:07.:14:08.

arrived in a crate that the lab deemed to be satisfactory.

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Three were classed as acceptable, as for

:14:11.:14:14.

the rest, three were dirty, one was very dirty, two were extremely

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Give me an idea of how dirty we are talking, here?

:14:18.:14:23.

Well, dirty would be, say, a typical kitchen floor.

:14:24.:14:34.

And extremely dirty or very dirty would be the sorts of

:14:35.:14:36.

levels that I would expect to find on the inside of the kitchen bin.

:14:37.:14:40.

There could be dangerous bacteria harboured in the crates.

:14:41.:14:43.

That's why they need to be cleaned and disinfected every time.

:14:44.:14:45.

Asda told Watchdog that it had not lived

:14:46.:14:48.

up to the standard of service its customers expect and said,

:14:49.:14:55.

although some policies and procedures hadn't

:14:56.:14:56.

been followed in the six stores involved it has taken immediate

:14:57.:14:59.

action to permanently improve standards across all home shopping

:15:00.:15:01.

And you can see more on that investigation on tonight's Watchdog

:15:02.:15:06.

Prison officers have likened conditions in English and Welsh

:15:07.:15:16.

jails to a bloodbath - they've been holding urgent talks

:15:17.:15:19.

What's so special about these plants?

:15:20.:15:26.

The space age experiments carried out by school children.

:15:27.:15:30.

After coming out of international retirement, Celtic captain

:15:31.:15:35.

Scott Brown is recalled to the Scotland squad for their

:15:36.:15:37.

They're known as the Guinea Pig Club, a group of airmen

:15:38.:15:52.

severely injured and burned during the Second World War

:15:53.:15:54.

who underwent pioneering experimental surgery.

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The techniques used by their plastic surgeon, Sir Archibald McIndoe,

:15:59.:16:01.

had a lasting impact on modern medicine.

:16:02.:16:05.

Just 17 survivors are still alive in the UK and today

:16:06.:16:09.

they were honoured at a ceremony attended by the Duke of Edinburgh

:16:10.:16:12.

at the National Memorial Arboretum in Staffordshire.

:16:13.:16:14.

Our Health Editor Hugh Pym has the story.

:16:15.:16:20.

At East Grinstead, newly-knighted Sir Archibald McIndoe,

:16:21.:16:23.

meets 227 members of the Guinea Pig Club.

:16:24.:16:28.

They were known as the guinea pigs because the burns treatment

:16:29.:16:30.

Little did they know then how much it would shape modern medicine.

:16:31.:16:37.

That was a photograph of me in hospital.

:16:38.:16:41.

Desmond O'Connell, who is nearly 97, is the oldest surviving member

:16:42.:16:44.

How they did this in wartime, I don't know.

:16:45.:16:50.

He was on a bombing mission in 1941 and suffered serious burns

:16:51.:16:53.

Three times they operated because it wasn't quite right.

:16:54.:17:14.

I had new eyelids, new ears and the backs

:17:15.:17:17.

The Duke of Edinburgh has been the Guinea Pig

:17:18.:17:27.

Today he unveiled a commemorative monument at the National Memorial

:17:28.:17:32.

Arboretum with some club members there too.

:17:33.:17:36.

The club is remembered at the Queen Victoria hospital,

:17:37.:17:41.

still a specialist burns and plastic surgery centre,

:17:42.:17:43.

The biggest thing is the philosophy of plastic surgery

:17:44.:17:49.

Which was really the fact that you can treat these horrifically

:17:50.:17:59.

burned patients and to do it by using techniques that

:18:00.:18:04.

are considered now, to be standard, but then they were quite radical.

:18:05.:18:11.

There's now a statue of Sir Archibald McIndoe with one

:18:12.:18:13.

of his patients here in East Grinstead.

:18:14.:18:15.

It was a community which welcomed the often severely disfigured

:18:16.:18:18.

servicemen on visit from the hospital.

:18:19.:18:20.

It became known as the town that didn't stare.

:18:21.:18:29.

I was unfair to McIndoe and for years later, it wasn't

:18:30.:18:35.

until I was a bit older and more wise, you realise just what he'd

:18:36.:18:38.

It's a unique club and the members and their patron know,

:18:39.:18:51.

there may not be too many more gatherings like this.

:18:52.:18:53.

Police in the US state of Iowa say they've captured a man suspected

:18:54.:18:57.

of killing two police officers in ambush-style attacks.

:18:58.:18:59.

Both men were killed in the city of Des Moines while sitting alone

:19:00.:19:02.

The motive for the killings is not clear.

:19:03.:19:12.

Who should have access to your social media account

:19:13.:19:14.

and what should they be able to do with it?

:19:15.:19:16.

Well, today Facebook blocked the plans of one insurer to look

:19:17.:19:19.

at young drivers' posts to help set insurance premiums.

:19:20.:19:21.

Our correspondent Simon Gompertz is here.

:19:22.:19:23.

It was one of our biggest car insurance companies, Admiral who

:19:24.:19:36.

wanted to look at the likes and posts of young drivers and do a sort

:19:37.:19:41.

of personality test. Look at writing style to see if they are organised

:19:42.:19:45.

and punctual and tried to deduce if they would be safe drivers and offer

:19:46.:19:51.

a reduced premium. But Facebook has stopped that saying they should not

:19:52.:19:55.

be using this private information. It does point out how valuable this

:19:56.:19:59.

information is and even Facebook users it when it sees what are likes

:20:00.:20:06.

art and directs advertising towards us.

:20:07.:20:09.

As the race to become America's next President tightens,

:20:10.:20:13.

both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump are spending

:20:14.:20:15.

their final few days criss-crossing the country.

:20:16.:20:17.

They're focusing their efforts on the key battleground states that

:20:18.:20:19.

Christian Fraser has more more on how and where the presidential

:20:20.:20:24.

Welcome to our virtual world of Congress.

:20:25.:20:38.

Beneath this great dome of Capitol Hill, we are going to try

:20:39.:20:41.

and bring a little more clarity to a race that has gripped us,

:20:42.:20:44.

confused us, perhaps even shocked us.

:20:45.:20:51.

Yet still, with less than a week to go to the vote,

:20:52.:20:53.

we can't be sure which of these two candidates will become the 45th

:20:54.:20:56.

In fact, it is still possible one of them wins the most votes

:20:57.:21:01.

Think of this as not one election but 51 mini elections.

:21:02.:21:12.

You will see each of these states is allocated a fixed

:21:13.:21:15.

number of state electors, determined by the size

:21:16.:21:17.

Altogether, 538 electoral college votes.

:21:18.:21:19.

Obviously, it's these states with the because populations,

:21:20.:21:30.

with the most state electors that become crucial.

:21:31.:21:32.

So California, for instance, where Hillary Clinton to win 50%

:21:33.:21:35.

of the vote plus one, and we expect her to do that,

:21:36.:21:39.

then all 55 votes would go Democrat blue.

:21:40.:21:45.

And then look how many other states Trump has to win to equal Now,

:21:46.:21:49.

in these final frenzied days of campaigning, the focus falls

:21:50.:21:51.

There are up to 13 of them and some big ones among them,

:21:52.:21:55.

including that last one there, Ohio.

:21:56.:21:57.

Ohio has not backed a losing presidential candidate since this

:21:58.:22:02.

Now the national poll of polls has tightened.

:22:03.:22:05.

The gap has got closer in recent days.

:22:06.:22:07.

But really, it's the polling within those battle ground

:22:08.:22:09.

If we colour them as some polls project it will go today,

:22:10.:22:20.

then you will see nine go Democrat blue and four go red, including Ohio

:22:21.:22:24.

and currently Florida, though only by a whisker.

:22:25.:22:26.

There are around 320 million people in the United States.

:22:27.:22:34.

On our graphic, everyone of these people represents 10 million voters.

:22:35.:22:37.

Now, we can lose 103 million who are either children

:22:38.:22:39.

60 million took part in the primaries, so we know they vote.

:22:40.:22:44.

Taking the figures from the last election, we expect another

:22:45.:22:46.

But that leaves some 90 million who never do.

:22:47.:22:52.

And that's where the Trump campaign is pinning its hopes.

:22:53.:22:56.

We have seen here in the UK, with the Brexit result,

:22:57.:22:59.

people who don't ordinarily vote, can tip the balance

:23:00.:23:01.

And don't forget, they are also voting to decide the make-up

:23:02.:23:09.

The colour of these two Chambers will determine how

:23:10.:23:17.

much power the next president will have.

:23:18.:23:20.

Our North America Editor Jon Sopel is in Florida.

:23:21.:23:22.

We've seen the arithmatic of what they have to do to win,

:23:23.:23:30.

How are these candidates going to make their sums add up? If you had

:23:31.:23:38.

asked me a few days ago, it would have been a normal battle stakes.

:23:39.:23:47.

Since the FBI announcement, Donald Trump feels emboldened and he has

:23:48.:23:51.

announced he is spending a lot of money advertising in Wisconsin,

:23:52.:23:56.

Michigan in the North, Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico in the

:23:57.:24:00.

south-west. It is a sign of his growing confidence that things are

:24:01.:24:05.

turning in his direction. Against that, it is still very tight and in

:24:06.:24:09.

the places where Hillary Clinton needs to win, she is still doing OK.

:24:10.:24:15.

But there is no room for complacency. In Florida, the number

:24:16.:24:20.

of African Americans going out to vote seems to be down on four years

:24:21.:24:27.

ago and that could cause Hillary Clinton big problems. Donald Trump

:24:28.:24:32.

has great enthusiasm and Hillary Clinton has a great ground again.

:24:33.:24:35.

John, thank you very much. Is it possible for astronauts

:24:36.:24:38.

to grow their own food in space? That's what thousands of school

:24:39.:24:41.

children have been finding out. They've carried out experiments

:24:42.:24:43.

to see whether seeds that have been in space grow as well as those that

:24:44.:24:46.

have stayed on Earth. Our Science Correspondent,

:24:47.:24:49.

Pallab Ghosh has been Eating on the International Space

:24:50.:24:59.

Station is a little different. The food is freeze-dried, bland and has

:25:00.:25:04.

a life of its own. So the plan is for astronauts to grow their own

:25:05.:25:09.

food. We are going to get a packet of these space seeds... Can seeds

:25:10.:25:17.

survive in space? Earlier this year, Tim Peake sent seeds that had been

:25:18.:25:22.

with him on the space station to 3000 schools and asked people is to

:25:23.:25:26.

plant them alongside one that had stayed on earth. Today, at a special

:25:27.:25:30.

conference, children came from across the country to hear the

:25:31.:25:34.

results. They brought models, baguettes and even specially made

:25:35.:25:42.

cakes for Tim. Experiment, run by the Royal horticultural Society,

:25:43.:25:46.

showed space seeds grew almost as well as the earth seeds. It is a

:25:47.:25:51.

boost to the possibility of growing crops in outer space? As well as

:25:52.:25:55.

being a fun experiments, there is a fun side to this and it is to

:25:56.:25:59.

improve our knowledge on how to improve growing food in space and

:26:00.:26:06.

how seeds can survive the harsh conditions in space. The experiment

:26:07.:26:11.

has inspired a new generation to the wonders of science. Who wants to be

:26:12.:26:17.

a scientist? Why do you want to be a scientist? You get to do loads of

:26:18.:26:23.

fun things and activities. You get to do different potions. I have

:26:24.:26:31.

always liked science stuff. I don't know why. I have always liked it and

:26:32.:26:35.

if I got the chance, I absolutely would.

:26:36.:26:38.

We need to protect our plants to night from frost. The frost is

:26:39.:26:55.

setting in now, as temperatures dipped quickly this evening. But a

:26:56.:27:00.

change with weather fronts close to Scotland and Northern Ireland as the

:27:01.:27:03.

night goes on, the coldest part of the night is round about now. Cloud

:27:04.:27:09.

will increase with outbreaks of rain in the night. The clearer skies, the

:27:10.:27:13.

coldest weather by morning in England and Wales and there will be

:27:14.:27:17.

a few freezing fog patches in the Midlands and in south-east England.

:27:18.:27:22.

Take care with any of those. Change tomorrow after today's Sunny spells

:27:23.:27:27.

in Scotland and Northern Ireland. Cloud and outbreaks of rain feeding

:27:28.:27:30.

into north-west England and western parts of Wales. Much of East Anglia,

:27:31.:27:39.

mainly dry until after dark. Temperatures no less warm,

:27:40.:27:42.

particularly where you have Cloud and outbreaks of rain. Maybe a few

:27:43.:27:47.

late sunny spells for Northern Ireland. Some of the rain towards

:27:48.:27:52.

East Anglia, South East England. Not very much. On Friday, the sunshine

:27:53.:27:57.

comes back but there will be showers around on some of those heavy

:27:58.:28:00.

running through northern Scotland, moving out of Northern Ireland

:28:01.:28:02.

towards north-west England and West Wales. But some sunny spells. The

:28:03.:28:09.

weekend, low pressure at this stage is moving away from us, but the flow

:28:10.:28:13.

of air around the low pressure for the weekend coming down from the

:28:14.:28:18.

north. A feed of colder air coming back towards us, but it is coming on

:28:19.:28:22.

a stronger wind as well. It was mild for Harrow ween -- Hallowe'en.

:28:23.:28:31.

Bonfire night will have to contend with the cold wind. A few showers

:28:32.:28:34.

around the coastal areas but many inland areas will be staying dry.

:28:35.:28:37.

That's all from the BBC News at Six, so it's goodbye from me,

:28:38.:28:41.

and on BBC One we now join the BBC's news teams where you are.

:28:42.:28:44.

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