20/06/2016 BBC News at Six


20/06/2016

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Tributes, tears and applause in Parliament, as MPs gather

:00:00.:00:00.

to remember their murdered colleague Jo Cox.

:00:07.:00:11.

The House of Commons was packed, two roses on the only empty

:00:12.:00:14.

seat in the chamber, where the Labour MP would have sat.

:00:15.:00:19.

The fearless Jo Cox never stopped fighting for what is right.

:00:20.:00:22.

She gave voice to the voiceless, she spoke truth to power.

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Batley and Spen will go on to elect a new MP but no-one

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Applause as MPs left the chamber, looking up to the public gallery,

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where Jo Cox's family and two young children were sitting.

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With just three days to go before the EU referendum,

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Ukip leader Nigel Farage accused David Cameron and George Osborne

:00:48.:00:53.

of implying there was a link between Jo Cox's murder

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The Remain camp are using these awful circumstances to try to say

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that the motives of one deranged, dangerous individual were similar

:01:03.:01:06.

of half the country, and perhaps more, who believe

:01:07.:01:10.

Speaking to the BBC today, David Cameron denies the allegation

:01:11.:01:16.

and insists he's led a positive campaign.

:01:17.:01:21.

The Orlando gunman - the FBI releases transcripts

:01:22.:01:28.

He called himself an Islamic soldier.

:01:29.:01:35.

And high hopes for both Wales and England ahead of tonight's

:01:36.:01:38.

And coming up in Euro 2016 Sportsday, there is only one

:01:39.:01:45.

story as far as the home nations are concerned.

:01:46.:01:48.

We'll get a fans' eye-view as we approach crunch time

:01:49.:01:50.

Good evening and welcome to the BBC News at Six.

:01:51.:02:14.

The husband and two young children of the murdered MP Jo Cox have been

:02:15.:02:18.

in Parliament this afternoon to hear tributes to her from a packed

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MPs were recalled to Westminster this afternoon for a special

:02:22.:02:25.

session, to allow friends and colleagues to pay their respects.

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On her empty seat on the famous green benches two roses -

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a red one for Labour, a white one for her home

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As the session came to a close, there was standing ovation

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and the entire chamber broke out in applause.

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Our deputy political editor, John Pienaar, was there.

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Two roses, white for Yorkshire and Labour red either side. For a single

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unforgettable hour, Parliament was no place for parties and

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point-scoring. One young MP's shocking death had moved many. With

:02:58.:03:03.

a rose on every chest, MPs high and low hoped many would leave -- that

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Jo Cox would leave a better politics behind. We need a kinder and gentler

:03:09.:03:15.

politics. We all have a responsibility in this House and

:03:16.:03:19.

beyond not to whip up hatred and also division. David Cameron caught

:03:20.:03:27.

the mood, too. Most politicians tried to improve lives. Jo Cox and

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her work for refugees had saved them. Jo was a humanitarian to her

:03:31.:03:36.

call. A passionate ambient campaigner whose grit and

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determination to fight for justice saw her time and time again driving

:03:40.:03:45.

issues up the agenda and making people listen, and, above all, act.

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-- a brilliant campaigner. Quite simply, there are people on our

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planet today only here and alive because of Jo. But it was the

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closest friends who hit home. The best memories make you laugh. Jo

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Cox's home was a houseboat. I remember worrying I had drunk and

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too much wine earlier in the evening when I remembered it was the boat

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that was swaying and not me! Her friend had left MPs a mission. To

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combat and guard against hatred, intolerance and injustice. To serve

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others with dignity and love. And that's the best way we camera member

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her and all she stood for. But last, let me say this. Her constituency

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will go on to elect a new MP but no one can replace a mother. And this

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was a loss felt across party lines. A Conservative not widely thought of

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as soft centred showed his feelings, too. Making common cause with a

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crusty old Tory, she and I became co-chairs of the all-party Friends

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Of Syria. And she was brave. There was just one moment more political.

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Another friend voiced what he believed would be Jo Cox's feeling

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about the Ukip anti-mass migration poster. She would have responded

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with outrage and about the calculated narrative of cynicism and

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despair that it represents, because she understood that rhetoric has

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consequences. And in security, fear and anger are used to light a fuse,

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then an explosion is inevitable. Perhaps most moving, an MP who was

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another close personal friend. The words were those of Jo Cox. The

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tearing a motion was her own. Children are being killed on their

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way to school. One in three children have grown up knowing nothing but

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fear and war. Those children have been exposed to things nobody should

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witness and I know I would risk life and limb to get my two precious

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babies... Out of that hellhole. APPLAUSE

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Applause is against the rules but they did it anyway. Every eye on Jo

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Cox's two children and her family who had watched it from the public

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gallery. Afterwards, in Parliament Square, her parents, Gordon and

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Jean, joined those paying their respects.

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The man charged with murdering Jo Cox, Thomas Mair,

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appeared before a judge at the Old Bailey this

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afternoon via videolink from the top-security Belmarsh

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The 52-year-old was remanded in custody.

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He is charged with murder, grievous bodily harm and possession

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He is due to appear before the same court for a preliminary

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After a pause in campaigning ahead of Thursday's EU referendum,

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both sides are back out on the campaign trail again.

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This morning, the Ukip leader, Nigel Farage,

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accused the Prime Minister and the Chancellor of implying

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that there was a link between the killing of Jo Cox

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Mr Farage said there was a "clear implication" from their remarks

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that the Leave campaign was responsible for creating

:06:57.:06:58.

Here's our political correspondent Alex Forsyth.

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A loss that left a country known. An event so awful it forced a pause in

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the fiercest of campaigns. Both sides called for more respect, less

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venom. But as the tributes keep coming, so, too, do the accusations.

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The political truce set aside with one figure claiming rivals are

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making political capital out of tragedy. The Remain camp are using

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beat awful circumstances to try to say that the motives of one

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arranged, or for individual were similar of half the country and

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perhaps more who believe we should leave the EU. -- using these awful

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circumstances. Provoking reaction is no rare thing for Nigel Farage.

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This, the poster about immigration which caused such controversy. His

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latest accusation has been flatly denied by the Remain campaign and

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for some, the tone of those arguing for the UK to leave has forced the

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UK to rethink and backed Remain. Unfortunately, those of us at the

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outset with that inclusive vision for Brexit have, over time, be --

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been overtaken by a message which is divisive, inward looking,

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xenophobic, and unfortunately that is creating deep divide and hate on

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our streets. The official Leave campaign maintains its message has

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been positive. Today they invoked past battles for Britain, making the

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case for sovereignty, the Second World War servicemen. 1945, they

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were flat on their back. I would welcome a proper structure, not the

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structures of bureaucrats and plutocrats. This is a very different

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fight from the once these menu. But with so much of the line, the crew

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to campaigners say it is no time to shy away from the issues. -- so much

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on the line. We have to look at the impact of immigration on our public

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services and it's right that politicians of the day find the

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right ways in which to address these challenges. But how does it make you

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feel when you are being accused as a campaign of sowing seeds of division

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and hatred? That is not the situation or the position of Leave.

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We have been clear in this campaign with the case we have been making to

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the British public. Our cases about democracy and taking back control

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when it comes to decision-making away from those institutions of the

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EU. -- our case is about. And putting power back in the hands of

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the people. The there is a limit to what facts and figures can have in

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terms of impact. They are now looking to what they see as the UK

:09:52.:09:55.

place in the world, and that is why the tone is so important. And as

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this turbulent campaign takes off again for its crucial final push,

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some fear what has been said by both sides won't be forgotten, even after

:10:07.:10:09.

Thursday's vote. Today, David Cameron told the BBC

:10:10.:10:12.

he wouldn't hold back The Prime Minister

:10:13.:10:15.

insisted he'd fought a positive campaign,

:10:16.:10:17.

despite accusations On the campaign trail

:10:18.:10:18.

in Birmingham and Oxfordshire, he said he didn't want to wake up

:10:19.:10:23.

on Friday having not warned people of the risks,

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as our political editor, Not a minute to lose. It's easier to

:10:27.:10:40.

get around when police motorbikes clear the way. The Prime Minister's

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path has not been as smooth as Number Ten had planned. It is a race

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helped by some Labour faces. Does he have any time he can repeat the

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mantras? How many hands he can shake? I think we put a very clear

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argument, a positive argument about safer in, better off in. There's

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nothing more positive than having a strong economy and more jobs, and

:11:09.:11:12.

that's the heart of our case. But it's been positive to tell

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pensioners they might lose their pensions? To say that the leader of

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so-called Islamic State would be happy if we used our democratic

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right to leave? That's a positive campaign? I think there are real

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risks. I don't want to be the Prime Minister who wakes up on the 24th of

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June having not warned people of the risks of leaving the European Union.

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There are risks. Do you think this debate has gone too far? You've been

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calling colleagues liars. Today we have Nigel Farage accusing you of

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using the terrible death of Jo Cox to make your point. I would defend

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the points I've made about the Leave campaign's leaflets because I'm very

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concerned people are being asked to leave the European Union and the

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sickle market, costing jobs, and they are being asked to do that on

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the basis of some things that aren't true. -- the single market. He is

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not so keen to sell you I -- a car but very keen to sell you the single

:12:10.:12:15.

market, with this going from one factory, to another, to another, and

:12:16.:12:21.

then going around the continent. The question you are being asked, stay

:12:22.:12:24.

or go, is not just about pounds or pence. Even in the EU, we can't put

:12:25.:12:31.

a cap on immigration. But we can make sure people are free to go and

:12:32.:12:36.

work in France, Germany, Italy, and EU nationals are able to come and

:12:37.:12:41.

work here, but it is not an unrestricted right. If people come

:12:42.:12:44.

here and can't support themselves, we can ask them to leave. But it is

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true to say if somebody doesn't break the law and they are not

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making a claim on the state, they can come here in as many numbers as

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they want from the EU, we cannot limited? It is true. There are 2

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million Britons who live abroad and whose rights are guaranteed. If

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Europeans want to come and live here they can. And let's celebrate there

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are 50,000 EU nationals working in our health service. Do you wish you

:13:16.:13:20.

had made a more positive case for immigration? I feel we have made a

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positive case for our country being in. This last dash is for his

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future, too. And the clock is ticking. Every mile and every minute

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still matters. This is about our future, our family and their

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futures. If we walk out of that exit door, there is no way back in. It is

:13:42.:13:45.

not a decision for five or ten years, it is a decision for our

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lifetime. And I am really concerned we get it right. Our children are

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old enough to talk about it and Nancy stole some badges to take them

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into school for the In campaign. Nothing would surprise me! But will

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the results surprised him on Thursday?

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How do you read the campaign with just two days before the vote?

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It might feel like it sometimes but politics and real life are not

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parallel universes and I think it we saw that today. I've never seen

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anything like what we witnessed in Westminster. MPs in tears, one by

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one, together in sorrow, as they expressed their very, very heartfelt

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loss and mourning for Jo Cox. Meanwhile, the battle buses were

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back out on the road. Political campaigns never happen in a vacuum

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and I think inevitably, just as we were on the verge of making a

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momentous political decision, a significant and shocking political

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event like Jo Cox's death will have an impact. As one minister put it to

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me today, it is like an alarm clock went off. A sudden shock to the

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system, right at the time when voters were really tuning into this

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decision and starting to think about how they were going to make up their

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minds. So politicians are watching intently for how the public is

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reacting to this. But also, voters are being watched by people around

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the continent, too. The president of the EU council, Donald Tusk, and

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senior bureaucrats in Brussels, urged us to stay, but he also said

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that whatever the result, the EU will have to take a long, hard look

:15:32.:15:37.

at itself. Perhaps whatever we find out we have decided in the early

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hours of Friday morning, what has been raised in this debate and

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expressed by so many members of the public, that won't be ignored. Thank

:15:46.:15:47.

you. And you can find more information

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about what both sides are saying about the major issues

:15:50.:15:52.

at the referendum by Roses take her place in the Commons

:15:53.:15:53.

as MPs remember a woman who stood up The Orlando nightclub shooting -

:15:54.:16:07.

the gunman's lies about having And coming up in Euro

:16:08.:16:14.

2016 Sportsday: There is only one story as far

:16:15.:16:23.

as the home nations are concerned. We get a fan's eye view

:16:24.:16:24.

as we approach crunch time Slovakia and Russia will harbour

:16:25.:16:36.

their own hopes of winning your o 2016. We are counting down to

:16:37.:16:38.

kick-off. It's a big night ahead for England

:16:39.:16:42.

and Wales as both teams kick off in their final group

:16:43.:16:46.

games at Euro 2016. England play Slovakia

:16:47.:16:48.

in Saint-Etienne, while Wales take A win for both teams would see them

:16:49.:16:50.

qualify for the last 16 - We'll hear from the Welsh camp

:16:51.:16:56.

in a moment, but first let's go to our sports editor,

:16:57.:17:01.

Dan Roan, with the England These England fans behind me are in

:17:02.:17:13.

good spirits, because they know their team is now all but guaranteed

:17:14.:17:17.

qualification for the knockout stages of Euro 2016. But what

:17:18.:17:20.

everyone is talking about here in Saint-Etienne is the raft of changes

:17:21.:17:25.

that England manager Roy Hodgson is expected to make tonight to a

:17:26.:17:28.

winning team. There is lots at stake, because he knows that

:17:29.:17:31.

according to the FA chairman, England have to reach the last four

:17:32.:17:35.

of this tournament for him to be sure of staying in his job. In a

:17:36.:17:40.

moment my colleague will bring you latest on Wales' big match against

:17:41.:17:45.

Russia. But first here's how Roy Hodgson took a gamble with his own

:17:46.:17:47.

future and that of his team as well. For Roy Hodgson, Euro 2016 has

:17:48.:17:50.

already been an emotional journey, from frustration in Marseille

:17:51.:17:53.

to elation in Lens. So how will he be feeling later

:17:54.:17:55.

in Saint-Etienne after one of the biggest gambles

:17:56.:17:57.

of his managerial career? The major talking point here the six

:17:58.:18:01.

changes Hodgson looks set to make to the side that

:18:02.:18:04.

beat Wales last week. Even in-form captain

:18:05.:18:06.

Wayne Rooney will be rested against Slovakia as England look

:18:07.:18:10.

to rotate their squad. There are other players

:18:11.:18:13.

who would like to play and who've been knocking hard at the door

:18:14.:18:17.

to play, so I have the option if I want to refresh,

:18:18.:18:20.

because everyone is there, anxious to get their chance and

:18:21.:18:23.

anxious to show what they can do. Hodgson rolled the dice

:18:24.:18:28.

against Wales and it worked. Substitutes Jamie Vardy

:18:29.:18:31.

and Daniel Sturridge both scoring The fans have known for months

:18:32.:18:33.

they'll be coming here to Saint-Etienne,

:18:34.:18:41.

but where they head next, Win and their team can look forward

:18:42.:18:43.

to an easier last 16 match. But lose and much tougher opposition

:18:44.:18:49.

will stand in their way. The changes they made at half-time

:18:50.:18:52.

work, so you've got I think we should try

:18:53.:18:57.

and win the group. Finish third and we are liable

:18:58.:19:02.

to get somebody really good and it When England were last

:19:03.:19:04.

here David Beckham was sent off in the 1998 World Cup

:19:05.:19:09.

defeat to Argentina. But the captain from that night

:19:10.:19:11.

wants this current side to make They did that in spectacular style

:19:12.:19:14.

against Wales in the last minute, which should be

:19:15.:19:19.

great for confidence. Great for belief, for

:19:20.:19:24.

the players to believe Slovakia's win over Russia

:19:25.:19:26.

proved they're not a team to be taken lightly,

:19:27.:19:33.

and with a trickier route through this tournament,

:19:34.:19:35.

the cost of failure, Hodgson could be playing

:19:36.:19:37.

a dangerous game. As the team that claims

:19:38.:19:44.

to have the most passion and pride, Wales have already run

:19:45.:19:48.

the gamut of emotions. After the high of an opening win,

:19:49.:19:53.

the low of losing to England. It was like nothing

:19:54.:19:59.

I've ever experienced. When I seen it go in the net it

:20:00.:20:05.

didn't seem like real life. But when we got back

:20:06.:20:08.

into the dressing room we put into it perspective

:20:09.:20:11.

and thought, OK, it's not After waiting more than half

:20:12.:20:12.

a century to be here, To lose here, probably

:20:13.:20:19.

the trek home. My dad is nearly 100 now,

:20:20.:20:28.

and he's been waiting for years! Definitely we stand a chance

:20:29.:20:36.

and I can't wait for the next round. Toulouse is known as

:20:37.:20:40.

France's pink city. Today it's turning red,

:20:41.:20:42.

but Wales can't afford just Their opponents arrived desperate

:20:43.:20:44.

to beat them. Russia's position is

:20:45.:20:50.

finely balanced too. With an ageing defence,

:20:51.:20:52.

they'll be vulnerable if Wales can Gareth is vital to

:20:53.:20:57.

how the team plays. He's one of the best

:20:58.:21:04.

players in the world. He's already scored two

:21:05.:21:08.

goals in the tournament. Concerns remain over the behaviour

:21:09.:21:11.

of Russian fans, but the police They are just desperate

:21:12.:21:13.

for their party not to end. Wales made history just by

:21:14.:21:27.

qualifying for this tournament. Make it through to the next round, even

:21:28.:21:33.

more momentous. This is where their fate will be decided. Stadium will

:21:34.:21:37.

fill with sound. It is either the end of a long journey or the

:21:38.:21:41.

beginning of a whole new one. Thank you.

:21:42.:21:45.

The former Sheffield United striker, Ched Evans, who faces a retrial over

:21:46.:21:48.

rape allegations in October, has joined League One side

:21:49.:21:50.

Evans was jailed in 2012 for raping a 19-year-old woman,

:21:51.:21:54.

but the Court of Appeal quashed his conviction in April.

:21:55.:21:56.

Chesterfield's chairman said the club had decided he should be

:21:57.:21:59.

welcomed back as a professional footballer despite his

:22:00.:22:00.

Three 12-year-old girls from Salford who became seriously ill

:22:01.:22:07.

after taking ecstasy are now said to be in a stable condition.

:22:08.:22:10.

Police say a man and a woman have been arrested.

:22:11.:22:13.

It is thought the girls are among the youngest people

:22:14.:22:15.

in the UK to have fallen ill after taking the drug.

:22:16.:22:23.

Partial transcripts of phone calls have been released between police

:22:24.:22:25.

and the Orlando gunman, Omar Mateen, who killed 49 people in a nightclub.

:22:26.:22:30.

Mateen spoke in Arabic and called himself an Islamic soldier.

:22:31.:22:32.

The FBI said that he appeared to have been radicalised

:22:33.:22:36.

As Orlando continues to come together in its grief, more

:22:37.:22:51.

information's coming to light about the horrific events that led to so

:22:52.:22:56.

much loss of life at the Pulse nightclub. The night of the attack

:22:57.:23:01.

is now known police were negotiating for nearly half an hour over three

:23:02.:23:06.

different phone calls that the killer Omar Mateen. The FBI's

:23:07.:23:11.

released partial transcripts of the calls. Mateen identifies himself as

:23:12.:23:17.

an Islamic soldier, saying America had to stop bombing Iraq and Syria.

:23:18.:23:23.

At one point he says he has a suicide vest, and threatens to

:23:24.:23:27.

detonate vests in a vehicle if, in his words, anyone did anything

:23:28.:23:31.

stupid. We are not releasing the audio. While the killer made these

:23:32.:23:37.

murderous statements he did so in a chilling, calm and deliberate

:23:38.:23:41.

manner. The FBI says it is still looking into the motives of the

:23:42.:23:45.

killer, including issues surrounding his mental health. His own sexual

:23:46.:23:50.

orientation and the means by which he may have been radicalised.

:23:51.:23:56.

Back now to our top story, and over the past few weeks we've been

:23:57.:23:59.

hearing from a range of voices across the UK about how they plan to

:24:00.:24:03.

vote in the forthcoming referendum, and which issues matter to them.

:24:04.:24:05.

Tonight we hear from Pippa Gorman from Fakenham in Norfolk,

:24:06.:24:08.

and from Rani Taj, who lives in Solihull in the West Midlands.

:24:09.:24:11.

I'm 45 years old and I live in Fakenham, North Norfolk.

:24:12.:24:18.

This is my business, the Dog House, dog groomers.

:24:19.:24:20.

I have decided I'm going to vote to leave the EU.

:24:21.:24:28.

The last time the UK had a vote to decide whether we wanted to be

:24:29.:24:33.

part of the European Union was in 1975.

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We were voting to be able to trade with great terms across Europe.

:24:38.:24:44.

We've had no decisions since and everything's changed.

:24:45.:24:51.

There's people now making laws for us and for the whole of Europe

:24:52.:24:55.

We need people to come and work here with special skills.

:24:56.:25:09.

We need to be able to invite these people from all over the world.

:25:10.:25:14.

At the moment, we've just got these open doors.

:25:15.:25:17.

There's all these people from the EU choosing to come here but not

:25:18.:25:20.

necessarily contributing to our economy.

:25:21.:25:24.

To me it seems that everyone who wants to stay is almost doing it

:25:25.:25:27.

I'm not sure that's a fabulous reason to stay.

:25:28.:25:38.

I play this Asian instrument called a dhol.

:25:39.:25:44.

I will be voting to stay in the EU and as a young person I think it's

:25:45.:25:52.

empowering and our voices should be heard.

:25:53.:25:57.

I am of a generation that's never lived in a Britain that's not

:25:58.:26:00.

I would think it would make us completely isolated.

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We are a family, and for us to break away would make us very vulnerable.

:26:09.:26:19.

I think immigration is a benefit to allow immigration,

:26:20.:26:23.

People come from different countries, for whatever reason,

:26:24.:26:31.

and they come here and they open businesses and they want

:26:32.:26:33.

And that opens up many opportunities.

:26:34.:26:38.

When I play the dhol I feel a great sense of freedom, huge empowerment.

:26:39.:26:44.

I want to pass that empowerment on to the British nation.

:26:45.:26:55.

I want them to make the right decision.

:26:56.:26:57.

I want them to exercise their vote and stay in the EU.

:26:58.:26:59.

The views of Pippa Gorman from Fakenham in Norfolk,

:27:00.:27:02.

and Rani Taj from Solihull - ahead of the EU referendum.

:27:03.:27:05.

It's the first day of summer but you wouldn't think it Matt? No, and

:27:06.:27:14.

commuters at Reading station this morning and the whole of England and

:27:15.:27:18.

Wales would agree with that statement. These were the scenes in

:27:19.:27:25.

Rossendale in Lancashire. A chance of being the sunset on the first day

:27:26.:27:32.

of summer than it was the sunrise. There'll be plenty of sunshine

:27:33.:27:36.

around, but heavy showers in the short term. Essex, Suffolk and the

:27:37.:27:40.

South East. These will clear. Tonight mostly clear. Cloud over the

:27:41.:27:46.

English Channel. Showers into north-west Scotland later. Mostly

:27:47.:27:51.

clear skies. Not a chilly night. Temperatures into double figures to

:27:52.:27:55.

start Tuesday. A much brighter start compared to this morning. The

:27:56.:27:57.

exception is around the English Channel. Lots of low cloud. Drizzle

:27:58.:28:04.

at times. That could push into southern counties later. Showers

:28:05.:28:07.

across the north-west Highlands and islands, maybe Northern Ireland.

:28:08.:28:11.

Most of you having a dry day. With winds plight in eastern areas, this

:28:12.:28:15.

is where you'll see the best of the warmth. T in eastern areas, this is

:28:16.:28:18.

where you'll see the best of the warmth. Wednesday - the low cloud

:28:19.:28:22.

pushes into southern and eastern parts of England. Rain and drizzle.

:28:23.:28:27.

North and west of it, only the odd shower. Sunny spells. Heat and

:28:28.:28:33.

humidity is building in France. By Thursday, that will be coming our

:28:34.:28:39.

way. With it the increased risks of severe storms. Particularly in the

:28:40.:28:42.

South East and East Anglia. Away from that into Thursday, we continue

:28:43.:28:45.

to see sunny spells. One or two showers. Temperatures at levels they

:28:46.:28:50.

should be for the final of year. A humid night into Friday. The storms

:28:51.:28:53.

pushing their way eastwards. That's all from the BBC News at Six,

:28:54.:28:54.

so it's goodbye from me, Tributes have been paid to murdered

:28:55.:29:07.

MP Jo Cox. Roses a take her place in the Commons. While we've been on air

:29:08.:29:11.

it has been announced that 77-year-old Bernard Kenny, who was

:29:12.:29:15.

stabbed in the stomach when he tried to go to Jo Cox's aid, has been

:29:16.:29:19.

released from hospital.

:29:20.:29:20.

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