05/07/2016 Outside Source


05/07/2016

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Hello, I'm Karin Giannone, this is Outside Source.

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We've got stories from Washington, Saudi Arabia and Indonesia coming

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But we'll start right here in the UK,

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the first round of voting for a new leader of the Tory

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Two candidates are out of the race, but Michael Gove is staying in.

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During the course of this campaign, I've managed to bring people

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together from across Conservative Party behind an optimistic and

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hopeful message of change, and I hope to take a message to the

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country. -- key message. Hillary Clinton is on the campaign

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trail with President Obama. Earlier the FBI said it

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won't recommend criminal charges against her in connection with her

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use of a personal email server. But it did have some

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criticism of her. We spoke to Becky Morelle yesterday

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live from NASA's mission control while they were waiting to see

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if their Juno probe would successfully

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make it into orbit. CHEERING

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The mood is pure elation here, over a decade 's worth of work and a

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billion, to journey through space, Juno is the closest we've ever been

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to Jupiter. Jose Mourinho has given his first

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press conference since becoming He says he's got the job

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everybody wants. And we'll hear from the head

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of the Bank of England - who says some of the risks of Brexit

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it identified before the referendum As the fallout from Brexit continues

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to ripple through British politics - we're one step closer to finding out

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who will replace David Cameron That's because the governing

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Conservative Party has held the first round

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of its leadership election. The Home Secretary Theresa

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May came out on top. But it's this man -

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Liam Fox, the former This man, Stephen Crabb, the Work

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and Pensions Secretary has pulled out after coming in fourth.

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Let's hear from both of them. I think, tonight we should recognise

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that there is only one candidate in a position to unite the party and

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form a cohesive and strong government which our country needs

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at this time. It is a serious moment for our country and so I've taken

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the decision I won't put my name forward to the next round of voting

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but I will be lending my wholehearted support to Theresa May,

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who is overwhelmingly in the best position to be the next Prime

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Minister and leader of the Conservative Party. I'm sorry I'm

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not progressing further in this contest, I do not however regret

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entering it. There were three objectives I wanted to achieve, the

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first was to say that the next leader of the Conservative Party

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should honour the instruction given by the British people, we should

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leave the EU. The second is I wanted to introduce into this debate that

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national security has to be a prime consideration for whoever is the new

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Prime Minister, and that the experience matters. I decided to

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give my support to Theresa May. Our political correspondent

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Alex Forsyth is at Westminster. Two down, three still in the race,

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how do things stand? This is just the first round of voting, all MPs

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get to have a say and they try to whittle it down to two candidates,

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which goes into the wider Conservative Party membership. As we

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stand after day one, Theresa May is way out in advance, she got the most

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votes from MPs, in fact around half of all of those who voted, then Liam

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Fox, as you heard, was knocked out. Stephen Crabb decided to step aside.

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What is interesting is both have lent support to Theresa May.

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Interesting particularly for Liam Fox as he wanted the UK to leave the

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EU. Theresa May wanted to remain but he has still decided to back her.

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However, they only get one vote each. What really matters is whether

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their supporters -- where supporters decide to lend their vote to on

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Thursday, and whether Theresa May can scoop up some of those as well.

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Stay with us... One of the Conservative Leadership

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candidates Michael Gove, gave his reasons why he should be

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the next Prime Minister, despite coming third

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in the first ballot tonight. I've been arguing Britain needs a

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fundamental change for more than 20 years. I also have experience at the

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highest level of government, of driving change, often in the teeth

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of opposition. Also, I built a team to sport the -- support the EU in

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this campaign. Those who were passionate about remaining, like

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Nicky Morgan, and those who were arguing that we should leave, like

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Dominic Raab, during the course of this campaign I've managed to bring

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people together from across the Conservative Party, behind a hopeful

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and optimistic message of change, and I hope to take that message to

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the country. He says he is staying in the contest, does he have a

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chance after what he was seen to do to his former friend Boris Johnson?

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That attracted a lot of anger, Michael Gove announced he was

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standing for leadership without telling Boris Johnson first. He was

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long thought to be the front runner, and a lot of people saw it as a

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betrayal. People thought it might have cost Michael Gove some votes

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but he seems determined to stay in. We have Theresa May currently in

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front when it comes to support from MPs, who wanted the UK to stay in

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the EU. Then we have Michael Gove and Andrea Leadsom, the third

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candidate in the race. They both wanted to leave the EU. They are now

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seen to be vying for the second place. It means it can go forward to

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the wider party who get to have their say. Michael Gove makes the

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point here is the more experienced of the two and he thinks the party

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should get the chance to vote for someone who backed Brexit. It

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remains to be seen as to whether he can cast off allegations of betrayal

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and win back some support. It is worth saying whoever the

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Parliamentary party decides should go forward and whoever seems to be

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most popular, Theresa May at the moment, that may not be what happens

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when it comes to wider party voting. Leadership contests in the

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Conservative Party and the UK are always unpredictable, do not expect

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this to be different. One more clip, two that train MPs caught talking

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about the contest. -- veteran. Well, two veteran Conservative MPs

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have been caught talking about the contest whilst they didn't

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realise they were being recorded. Let's hear what Ken Clarke said

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to his colleague Malcolm Rifkind. I think I should give Stephen Crabb

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and encouraging vote first, but I I don't mind who wins so long

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as Michael Gove comes third. As long as he isn't

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in the final two... I don't think the membership

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will vote for him. Remember being in a discussion once

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about Syria and Iraq... I remember that he was so wild

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when it came to Syria or Iraq, I And he's quite right wing,

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even he was raising eyebrows. With Michael as Prime Minister,

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we would go to war with at least three

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countries at once. He did a favour, getting

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rid of Boris. The idea of him as Prime

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Minister is ridiculous. I don't think Johnson

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or Andrea Leadsom are in It was obvious the voters, i.e.,

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Conservative Party members were Only three years ago,

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she's had a poor line conversion. She does have experience in the city

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and Bank of England, she is not

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one of the tiny band of lunatics who thinks

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that we can have a glorious economic future

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outside of the single market. As long as she

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understands, after some of the extremely stupid

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things she's been saying. I hope that one of

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these proves me wrong, Theresa or Stephen, one of them has

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begun to have an idea of what I agree with you,

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Theresa is a bloody difficult woman, but we worked

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for Margaret Thatcher! She's all right, I get on all right

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with her and she The thing I don't know,

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she's been in the Home Office for I don't know her views

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on the Home Office. She does not know much

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about foreign affairs... Well! Ken Clarke talking off-camera

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to Malcolm Rifkind. People must wonder whether we learned more from

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that candid chat off-camera then we have from a formal interview? It is

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safe to say that has had a lot of pick-up and created interest in

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Westminster, that honest appraisal from Ken Clarke, reminding people of

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who he is, a Tory grandees, no train jerked to leadership elections, he

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has fought in a feud -- stranger. He did not expect those remarks to be

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broadcast. He shrugged it off, saying fair enough, he should have

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known better with a microphone and camera on, but they are my views.

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With this affection in politics in the UK, some people may have found

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that refreshing. Whether it helps or hinders candidates remains to be

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seen. Many MPs would have made up their own minds regardless of what

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Ken Clarke has to say. Alex Forsyth in Westminster, thank you.

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An FBI investigation says it is not recommending charges

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against Hillary Clinton over her use of private email accounts to receive

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The FBI director said her behaviour was "extremely careless'' -

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Here's a look at what the FBI found in its year long investigation.

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They examined some 30,000 e-mails on private servers.

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110 of them were considered classified, and eight

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But, the FBI said there was no signs of intentional

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Although we did not find clear evidence that Secretary Clinton or

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her colleagues intended to violate laws governing the hailing of

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classified information, there is evidence that they waged dreamily

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careless in their handling of very sensitive and classified information

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-- were extremely. Given the importance, and usual transparency

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is in order. Although there is evidence, a la judgment is no

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reasonable prosecutor would bring forward such a case -- our judgment.

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Anthony, the legal threat has been removed. How much damage that

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extremely careless criticism from the FBI might do in the election

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campaign? Exactly, it is one of those sound bites that could easily

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be encapsulated and played over again. I think Hillary Clinton will

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be hearing best for the next four months of the general election

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campaign. You played that clip where Komi talked about 110 classified

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e-mails, -- James Comey. -- hearing those. She has said that she did not

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knowingly transmit classified documents over the Private e-mail

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server. This is a direct contradiction to what she said

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earlier. I think it will be played out over and over again. How is

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Donald Trump responding? He took to Twitter quite quickly, calling it a

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rigged system and Hillary Clinton was being judged by a different set

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of rules. He set out a longer e-mail, line by line attack on her.

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He led with the charge that she did not have proper safeguards on that

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e-mail system so the B I said it possibly could have been hacked. --

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the FBI. There could be people with a blackmail Falcons they could

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access this. That should disqualify her from being president, he said.

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He is latching onto the security angle saying she put American

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secrets act risk. -- at risk. As we speak Hillary Clinton

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is hitting the campaign trail with They've been speaking in the last

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hour in North Carolina. I am here for a simple reason... I

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am glad to see our outstanding congressional delegation. You are

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lucky to have her. I'm glad you have an outstanding candidate for the

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Senate. An outstanding candidate for governor... And I'm going to be

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working for them too but I am here today. Because I believe in Hillary

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Clinton. CHEERING And I want you to help elect her to

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be the next President of the United States of America.

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How significant is this, to see President Obama alongside Hillary

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Clinton? Very significant, there have been few cases in modern

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history where they've had the ability to campaign for a member of

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the party that he wants to replace him. It is interesting, we've heard

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no mention of e-mails or the FBI. Hillary Clinton introduced Barack

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Obama, it almost felt like a campaign event for Barack Obama

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running for presidency, not Hillary Clinton. Given today's proceedings,

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and the fact that he is very popular, more popular than Hillary

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Clinton, I think she probably wants it to be a ballot, of his legacy and

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less about her. You are wondering how enthusiasm he had been about

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getting involved. But it seems he's quite keen? He was leading the crowd

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in a Hillary child, he was fired up and seemed energetic. I think he

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enjoys being on the campaign Trail and has been waiting in the wings

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while the campaign has played out -- chant. Seeing Donald Trump almost

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become nominee. He wants to make the case for his legacy and

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administration. I think he sees Donald Trump of the opposite of what

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he's tried to do over the last seven years. Thank you. Still to come, we

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report from Nasa Mission control after they successfully put their

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junior probe into orbit around Jupiter. -- Juno.

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This is Outside Source live from the BBC newsroom.

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Theresa May has comfortably won the first round of the Conservative

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Party leadership contest. Liam Fox and Stephen Crabb are out of the

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race. Other stories being focused

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on around the BBC. Reports say 17 more people have been

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arrested in Turkey in connection with the attack at Istanbul Airport

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which killed 45 people. Some are said to be

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Russian nationals. The three bombers are reported to be

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Russian, Uzbek and Kyrgyz nationals, all belonging to so called Islamic

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State. A French parliamentary inquiry has

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accused the intelligence services of multiple failures before last

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year's attacks in Paris. It says there were too many agencies

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involved in the operations World Service radio has more on that

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story. On the BBC News App you can see more

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of these pictures showing It created powerful waterspouts,

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injuring 38 people. They formed on Saturday evening

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near a beach in the More than 30 homes, offices

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and shops were damaged. Time for Outside

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Source Business now. The Bank of England says some

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of the economic risks it warned of if Britain decided

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to leave the EU have The pound fell to a new 30-year-low

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against the dollar today and a three-year-low

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against the euro. This graph shows the value

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of the pound compared to the dollar - you can see

:17:45.:17:48.

what happened immediately Since then it rallied a bit then

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began going down again. This is what Mark Carney had to say

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earlier. At its median in March, their FPC

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judged the risks around the referendum were the most significant

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near-term domestic risks to financial stability -- meeting. Some

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of those risks have begun to crystallise, the UK has entered a

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period of uncertainty and significant economic adjustment. The

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efforts of the Bank of England will not be able to fully and immediately

:18:23.:18:27.

offset the market in economic volatility that will be expected

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while this adjustment proceeds. More fundamentally, the implications for

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jobs, real wages and jobs will be driven by major decisions made by

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others within the public and private sectors.

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As part of a series of measures to boost the economy,

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the Central Bank also said banks would no longer have to set

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That could potentially free up ?150 billion for loans

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The BBC's economic correspondent Andrew Walker told me

:18:55.:18:57.

about what problems we are already seeing.

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There have been substantial falls in the pound as you mentioned and in

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some shares where the companies concerned are particularly exposed

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to any outburst of elements that could be in the British economy.

:19:15.:19:18.

Builders, banks, airlines in particular. The wider concerns are

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about investment by business. We have seen one or two little signs by

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the survey of Institute of directors, it showed more than a

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third were likely to invest less as a result of the referendum result.

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Some said they would invest more but they are very much the minority. In

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terms of that concern about investment, it is early days and it

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is the kind of thing that could unfold depending on business

:19:47.:19:50.

decisions over a long period of months and even years before we get

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the full verdict as to what the impact has been. Was it all

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wall-to-wall gloom? There were some encouraging things mentioned. One

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was a fall in sterling has a silver lining, making British exports more

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competitive and he mentioned we have seen a move into various types of

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bonds, government debt for example, in the financial markets which has

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had the effect of reducing borrowing costs for the government and also

:20:18.:20:21.

for some bigger more creditworthy businesses. A positive there. More

:20:22.:20:26.

generally he said on a number of occasions he is convinced the

:20:27.:20:29.

British economy will make this adjustment successfully. It may be

:20:30.:20:34.

bumpy at times but will turn out. To what extent is a powerful figure

:20:35.:20:39.

like this have responsibility for it not to become a self-fulfilling

:20:40.:20:43.

prophecy? He must choose his words carefully, it has to be said. He is

:20:44.:20:48.

emphasising some upsides but you had to say that if he and his colleagues

:20:49.:20:52.

at the Bank of England do believe there are significant risks they

:20:53.:20:55.

would lose credibility if they were not willing to point them out.

:20:56.:20:57.

Andrew Walker. Well they won't be around

:20:58.:21:00.

for much longer. The smartphone manufacturer says

:21:01.:21:04.

it's going to stop making the BlackBerry Classic,

:21:05.:21:06.

an updated model of the original That is, before Apple's iPhone

:21:07.:21:08.

came onto the scene. Take a look at this graph comparing

:21:09.:21:12.

the share price of the two In a blog post

:21:13.:21:15.

announcing the decision. BlackBerry's Chief Operating Officer

:21:16.:21:27.

wrote: "Sometimes it can be For BlackBerry, and more importantly

:21:28.:21:29.

for our customers, the hardest part in letting go is move accepting that

:21:30.:21:36.

change makes way for new and better Let's get more now

:21:37.:21:40.

from our correspondent Where did it all go wrong for

:21:41.:21:56.

BlackBerry? They really owned a smartphone market at one point. It

:21:57.:22:01.

was the device that everyone used. But, they were eclipsed basically

:22:02.:22:07.

from android phones and by Apple. They started losing a lot of market

:22:08.:22:10.

share, and it has been difficult for them. If you think about 2009,

:22:11.:22:18.

BlackBerry and about 40% market share. In 2014, they now own 1.8% of

:22:19.:22:25.

the market share. They just lost out when you saw all of these innovative

:22:26.:22:29.

products coming from different companies. What is their strategy

:22:30.:22:34.

now? Are they going to try to change what they produce all go down new

:22:35.:22:39.

avenues? What BlackBerry have said is that if they cannot make these

:22:40.:22:45.

smartphones profitable by a certain time they will get out of the

:22:46.:22:50.

business altogether. This is already the beginning, the iconic classic

:22:51.:22:57.

BlackBerry smartphone will no longer be developed, and it was the only

:22:58.:23:02.

BlackBerry that used their operating system. All of the new BlackBerry

:23:03.:23:05.

phones actually use an android operating system. What is BlackBerry

:23:06.:23:10.

if it does not have smartphones? It will actually be concentrating on

:23:11.:23:17.

software. That is where the company is making its money these days.

:23:18.:23:19.

Thank you very much. It's a journey that's

:23:20.:23:23.

taken five years, covered three-billion kilometres,

:23:24.:23:24.

and cost over a billion dollars. But NASA have pulled it off -

:23:25.:23:26.

at least the first big challenge. Last night its Juno probe entered

:23:27.:23:30.

orbit around Jupiter. This was the reaction

:23:31.:23:32.

at mission control. A sequence of tones sent

:23:33.:23:33.

from the spacecraft confirmed the complicated braking manoeuvre

:23:34.:23:36.

needed to pull the probe the complicated braking manoeuvre

:23:37.:23:50.

needed to pull the probe into the planet's gravity

:23:51.:24:04.

had gone as planned. Now scientists can really

:24:05.:24:06.

get down to business. Let me show you this tweet

:24:07.:24:08.

from NASA: "Engine burn complete

:24:09.:24:10.

and orbit obtained. I'm ready to unlock

:24:11.:24:11.

all your secrets, #Jupiter. I think that tweet might be there...

:24:12.:24:13.

Better late than never! The BBC's Science Correspondent

:24:14.:24:24.

Rebecca Morelle was at Mission Control in Pasadena

:24:25.:24:26.

as events unfolded. The mood is pure elation here, after

:24:27.:24:42.

a 2.8 million kilometre journey through space, this is the closest

:24:43.:24:48.

we've ever been to Jupiter. The Juno spacecraft blasted off in 2011 and

:24:49.:24:55.

has been on an epic journey. We prepared a contingency

:24:56.:24:58.

communications procedure, and guess what? We don't need it any more! And

:24:59.:25:07.

this is its new home. Over the next 20 months, Juno will complete 37

:25:08.:25:12.

orbits. It will give us our best ever views of the giant red spot, a

:25:13.:25:17.

fast storm raging for hundreds of years. And it will appear beneath

:25:18.:25:22.

the planet is fixed well of cloud to finally reveal what lies beneath.

:25:23.:25:27.

Jupiter is so massive that 1000 births could sit inside of it. And

:25:28.:25:33.

as it spins every 12 hours it takes everything with it -- earths. It is

:25:34.:25:38.

an incredible environment with huge storms on the surface. And Juno will

:25:39.:25:47.

unlock its secrets. It is lit up with a spectacular aurora. The data

:25:48.:25:51.

pulls back, illuminating this mysterious planet.

:25:52.:25:54.

We will keep you up-to-date with what it finds. More after the

:25:55.:25:58.

weather. See you in a minute... Since July the 4th, this huge

:25:59.:26:12.

thunderstorms have been raging across central,

:26:13.:26:13.

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