13/10/2016 BBC News at Six


13/10/2016

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The battle over the cost of Brexit which means Tesco

:00:00.:00:07.

is running out of some of the UK's favourite brands.

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Tesco's refusing to pay a price hike by one of its suppliers,

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blamed on the falling value of the pound.

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It's the scale of that fall that makes the difference.

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Neither retailers nor manufacturers can absorb a hit on that level.

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So what you will see is that prices in the shops will rise.

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Will the supermarkets absorb the price rises or is Tesco's just

:00:33.:00:35.

No-one will have the right to deny Scotland the chance to choose a

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Nicola Sturgeon makes her strongest bid yet for a second referendum

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New safety concerns at two thirds of A departments in England.

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Thailand plunges into mourning at the death of their King,

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the world's longest reigning monarch.

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# Johnny's in the basement, mixing up the medicine

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# I'm on the pavement thinking about the government

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And, Bob Dylan joins the likes of Hemingway and Steinbeck to win

:01:09.:01:22.

No regrets - 2012 Olympic Heptathlon Champion Jessica Ennis-Hill

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announces her retirement, saying she wanted

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Good evening and welcome to the BBC News at Six.

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It's a high profile battle over the cost of Brexit being fought

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in the aisles of the UK's largest supermarket.

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Tesco is running low on dozens of its most

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famous household brands - including Marmite, PG

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Tips and Pot Noodle - after the food and consumer goods

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The reason - a row over a price hike by Unilever of up to 10%

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which the company is blaming on the steep fall in

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the value of the pound since the vote to leave the EU.

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We had reported from Unilever that a deal has been reached between the

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two companies. No confirmation of that yet from Tesco.

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Our business correspondent, Emma Simpson, reports.

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They're some of our most popular brands, but they've been

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They're made by Unilever, a global giant.

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It wants to raise prices by up to 10%, but Britain's

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The result - deliveries have been stopped and dozens of products

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This is the first big fight over who pays the price

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There was certainly no problem getting hold of products at this

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People love it or hate it, a bit like Brexit.

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But many in this industry believe that the decision to leave the EU

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will lead to higher prices for shoppers.

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I think this is the story from now on.

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I think the currency is devalued and the consequence of that

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at the scale it's happened, 20%, means that neither

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manufacturers nor retailers, long-term, can absorb those costs.

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Take Marmite, it may be made in the UK, but materials

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like the glass jars are bought in dollars, so costs have gone up

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Unilever says it cares deeply that its brands are affordable

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and even with the price hikes it says it still wouldn't

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It's like everything else, they're in business,

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If the pound goes down or whatever it does,

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the price of food is going to go up, same as petrol.

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It will even itself out as time goes on, definitely.

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Shoppers have been enjoying falling prices for several years

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thanks to cut throat competition in the aisles.

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This dispute though seems a sign of things to come.

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Every food supplier who sources outside the UK, every food retailer

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who buys products outside the UK is having the same issue.

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However, Tesco and Unilever are both very big and they probably act

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as the right players to have this public debate.

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Have the public argument and, I can guarantee you, every retailer

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is waiting in the wings to see what Tesco settles for.

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It's not just groceries, Next has also warned

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Speaking at a business event today it's pro-Brexit boss says

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the answer is to boost the economy in other ways.

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Ultimately, there may be inflation coming into the UK economy and that

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means Government has got to redouble its efforts to invest in

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infrastructure to counter that effect. If they can do that, if they

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can find other ways to grow, that will more than offset any of the

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problems that might be caused by inflation coming flew from Brexit.

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Tesco and Unilever say they hope to resolve things soon, in other words,

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this is a relationship too important to fail.

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Soon. I can tell you tonight this standoff is now over. Unilever have

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said in a short statement they were pleased to say that that the supply

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situation had now been suck spells sellsfully resolved. The much loved

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brands would be fully available. Tesco said it always put its

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customers first and was pleased to say this had been resolved to its

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satisfaction. We don't know what the deare. It wasn't just Tesco facing

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these price increases, all the big supermarkets were. Unilever said

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some accepted price increases. We don't know who they are. The big

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ones I was talking to said they were watching and waiting to see what

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Tesco was going to do. 2017 will be a difficult balancing act for all

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retailers. Emma Simpson, thank you. Scotland's First Minister,

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Nicola Sturgeon, has made her strongest move yet

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for a second referendum She has announced that consultation

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on legislation for a new referendum She told the SNP conference

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in Glasgow that the Scottish people should be able to reconsider

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independence in the light Our Scotland editor,

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Sarah Smith, reports Welcome the leader of the Scottish

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National Party and First Minister Nicola Sturegon is angry

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and she didn't mince Accusing the Tories of xenophobia,

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calling them a disgrace and delivering a stark warning,

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that if the UK Government doesn't listen to her on Brexit,

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she's prepared to hold another If you think, for one single second,

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that I am not serious about doing what it takes to protect

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Scotland's interests, I can confirm today

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that the independence referendum bill will be published

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for consultation next week. Party members were as delighted,

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as they were surprised. Nicola Sturegon's speech

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here in Glasgow was really a direct message to the Prime Minister

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in Downing Street. A clear warning, that if Theresa May

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doesn't listen to her concerns about Brexit, then Sturegon

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could demand a second SNP members are accustomed

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to being told to be patient, not to rush

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into a referendum they might lose. But the mood of the party leadership

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has clearly changed. Is this a threat to the Prime

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Minister that she must listen to the Scottish Government,

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or they will call a second No, it's a promise

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to the Prime Minister. We promise that we will stand up

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for the interests of We will do everything we have to do

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to protect our place in Europe. If that's what it takes,

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that's what we will do. Outside the conference centre,

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the landscape looks Opinion polls suggests

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there has not been any significant nationwide increase

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and support for independence. Just along the Clyde

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in the Riverside Museum, Scottish voters have their own ideas

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about what Nicola Sturegon Working on getting us

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independence from England. The people of Scotland voted to stay

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in the UK and the people of the UK There is not much we can do

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about Brexit now, but you have to make sure you have a good NHS and

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you've got a good education system. If voters think that making plans

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for another vote on independence means the Scottish Government might

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neglect the country's schools or hospitals,

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that certainly won't help them Downing Street have said that the

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Prime Minister does not interpret Nicola Sturgeon' speech as a threat

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and that Theresa May wants to engage constructively with the Scottish

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Government and she will get her chance. She is meeting Nicola

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Sturgeon on be the 24th October. Later this mornt. Sarah, in Glasgow,

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thank you. There are safety concerns about two

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thirds of A departments in hospitals in England,

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according to the watchdog the Care It's blaming the crisis in care

:09:26.:09:28.

in A mainly on a lack of care for the elderly which is causing

:09:29.:09:32.

a rise in emergency admissions It's a view echoed by England's most

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senior emergency doctor, who says the NHS is on its knees and parts

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"will implode" this winter. I'm one of the emergency doctors

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here, how you doing? Another challenging day

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at the Queens Hospital in Romford. It has one of the biggest emergency

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department in the country and there We have vast numbers of patients

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coming in through the doors and in a place like this we can see

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up to 700 patients in one day. So, the numbers are definitely

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a big issue, shall I say. The last inspection here said

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the department needed to improve,

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but the pressure is unrelenting. There are problems recruiting

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staff but more patients, many old and frail, are turning

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to accident and emergency for help. not alone, the latest report shows

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that a rise in demand for services and very tight budgets means

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hundreds of hospitals across England Today's report looks

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at the state of care across the health and social

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care system in England. Nearly two thirds of Accident

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and Emergency units were Hospitals are seeing

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many more older people, admissions of those over 85 have

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increased by a third in the past decade, but there's also been

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a 26% drop in the number of older people getting care from councils

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over the past four years. People who should be

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getting adult social care, they are either not

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getting the service or the NHS and we see Accident and

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Emergency attendances up, emergency referrals being up and particularly

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older people delayed in hospital. This could be part of the answer

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to easing the pressure on hospitals, somewhere for those like Eileen,

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who was well enough to be discharged, but still

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too frail to go home, logjam, what was meant to be

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a four-week stay has become four I need two carers at least

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to use the equipment. So other people

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probably need the same. We just cannot get carers

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so that this would people think it The Department of Health says

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the health and social care system is coping well given

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the pressures but the latest figures for acts of an emergency waiting

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times were worse than in most recent The pressures of an older,

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sicker population are being felt again across the UK,

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today's report paints a picture With me now is our social affairs

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correspondent, Alison Holt. What seems to be triggering this

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crisis in A in England is primarily the knock on effect

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of the lack of social We heard about pressures on social

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care before. Not least from the providers who handed back council

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contracts because they say they are not o financially viable. What is

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important about today is that we have the regulator, the watchdog

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overseeing the whole of the health and care system in England, saying

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those care pressures are having a direct effect on the NHS. That's

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care that we all rely on. It is a big step for the regulator to talk

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about "urgent action" and the need for "more money in social care."

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There was arguing over the exact wording of this report, I'm told.

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Many will say, once you have an Accident Emergency system that is

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struggling to cope. You are not only at a tipping point, you are facing a

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crisis, particularly if it's a tough winter ahead. The Government will

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say it allowed councils to raise extra money through council tax and

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more money in Parliament. When council are saying that's in the

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enough and this report, that is a lot for the Chancellor to think

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about in a run up to the Autumn Statement. Thank you.

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There's a warning the NHS in Wales could be facing a ?700 million black

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hole in its finances in three years' time.

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The independent think-tank, The Health Foundation, blames

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It recommends efficiency savings and limiting staff pay rises.

:13:59.:14:01.

The Welsh Labour Government says spending cuts will make it more

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difficult to deliver an affordable NHS in Wales.

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A reminder that to find out how much care costs in your area

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and what provision there is, go to the BBC website

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and put your details into the care calculator.

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The world's longest reigning monarch, the King of Thailand,

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It's prompted an outpouring of grief across the country.

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Revered as the father of the nation, the King is considered

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Thailand will now observe a period of mourning lasting a whole year.

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His death means the Queen is now the world's longest serving monarch.

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It was a moment everyone here knew was coming but few

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The long-expected announcement from the Palace, that the king

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who had reigned and inspired them for 70 years, had died.

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Still the cry went out - "Long live the king."

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Well, we've seen an intensely emotional reaction here to the news

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The unquestioned reverence to the monarchy in Thailand is not

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what it was, but the emotional bond that people across this country

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feel, to a man they still refer to as "Father of the nation",

:15:32.:15:34.

His death will leave an enormous void, one which may well have

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consequences for this country's political stability.

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He'd acceded to the throne when the monarchy was

:15:48.:15:49.

During his long life, the country modernised quickly.

:15:50.:15:55.

Yet, the king was treasured as a symbol of older, spiritual

:15:56.:16:00.

values, against the backdrop of rapid growth and messy politics.

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But, as he aged, Thailand became more polarised and the royal brand

:16:06.:16:10.

By the time of his death, he'd been out of sight for years.

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Yet, the grief on display was raw and very real.

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They remember a king, who, in earlier years,

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devoted himself to public duty and his charisma,

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they believe, underpinned their country's fortunes.

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Our top story this evening: Unilever says a deal has been reached with

:16:30.:16:48.

Tesco following a row over price hikes on some of the nation's

:16:49.:16:52.

favourite brands. Still to come, Jessica Ennis-Hill

:16:53.:16:54.

announces she's retiring. The former World Heavyweight

:16:55.:17:00.

Champion's boxing licence is suspended while authorities

:17:01.:17:04.

investigate anti-doping Bob Dylan has won the Nobel

:17:05.:17:06.

Prize for Literature. It's the first time

:17:07.:17:19.

in 115 years of the prize that the award has been

:17:20.:17:22.

given to a musician. The legendary singer-songwriter now

:17:23.:17:24.

ranks alongside former winners and giants of literature such

:17:25.:17:26.

as Hemingway, Steinbeck and Sartre. Dylan was awarded the accolade

:17:27.:17:32.

for having created "new poetic expressions within the great

:17:33.:17:34.

American song tradition". Our Arts Correspondent,

:17:35.:17:36.

Will Gompertz, has the story. # As Bob Dylan as said himself, he

:17:37.:17:52.

has a way with words. His lyrics have been sung, quoted

:17:53.:17:58.

and discussed the world over and today earned him the Nobel Prize for

:17:59.:18:01.

Literature. Bob Dylan. It came as a surprise.

:18:02.:18:09.

For having created new poetic expressions within the great

:18:10.:18:12.

American song tradition. You have you got a sense that the austere

:18:13.:18:19.

Swedish academy was stepping out of its literary comfort zone. Does Bob

:18:20.:18:23.

Dylan really deserve a Nobel Prize? Why? Why. Of course he does, he just

:18:24.:18:33.

got it. There was advice for the uninitiated. If you want to start

:18:34.:18:36.

listening, you may start on Blonde on Blonde. It has many classics and

:18:37.:18:42.

is an extraordinary xachl of his brilliant way of rhyming and -

:18:43.:18:46.

example of his brilliant way of rhyming and put together the frames

:18:47.:18:52.

and his pictorial thinking. Bob Dylan's position as an iconic

:18:53.:18:57.

position who helped elevate the status of pop music from an efemural

:18:58.:19:03.

disposal entertainment, into a bona fidy artform is well-Februaried.

:19:04.:19:11.

- well established. But becoming a Nobel Laureate takes him into

:19:12.:19:17.

another realm. To join an elite group of writers, from Munro to TS

:19:18.:19:24.

Eliot. His work is timeless. It'll reverberate not just for years or

:19:25.:19:28.

decades but centuries N that I think it is incredibly valid he gets the

:19:29.:19:32.

Nobel Prize for Literature. This is not someone who is the song and

:19:33.:19:35.

dance man, although he made that joke once that he was. Do you think

:19:36.:19:40.

of yourself as a singer or a poet? I think of myself more of a song and

:19:41.:19:45.

dance man, you know. # I make you feel my love...#

:19:46.:19:50.

Adele wasn't born when he said that. Like here she s like so many before,

:19:51.:19:59.

singing his words. Bob Dylan, like smaks spear has that

:20:00.:20:03.

knock of coining a phrase that becomes part of refer I day spee. He

:20:04.:20:07.

has his own literary voice, his own sense of metre and rhyme, metaphor

:20:08.:20:12.

and meaning. He is a contemporary chronicler,

:20:13.:20:19.

story teller, and poet whose words and work have changed attitudes, and

:20:20.:20:20.

lives. The Republican presidential

:20:21.:20:27.

candidate, Donald Trump, is under renewed pressure tonight with women

:20:28.:20:29.

lining up to allege he's One has claimed he grabbed her

:20:30.:20:31.

breasts and put his hand up her skirt during a flight

:20:32.:20:35.

to New York in the 1980s. Mr Trump has tweeted the story

:20:36.:20:38.

is a total fabrication. Here's our North America

:20:39.:20:40.

Editor, Jon Sopel. This woman, talking to the New York

:20:41.:20:48.

Times recounts how she was on a flit and manufactured to first class. She

:20:49.:20:51.

found herself sitting next to Donald Trump. He was like an objecting tow

:20:52.:20:56.

puss, like he had six arms. He was all over the place. He started

:20:57.:21:00.

putting his hand up my skirt. That was it. That was it. I was out of

:21:01.:21:06.

there. Two of the allegation that is emerged last night concern sexual

:21:07.:21:10.

misconduct by Mr Trump at his mansion in Florida. One woman, a

:21:11.:21:15.

writer for People magazine had gone to interview him and his wife for a

:21:16.:21:18.

piece on their first wedding anniversary. His wife was heavily

:21:19.:21:23.

pregnant at the time and gone upstairs it change when the reporter

:21:24.:21:27.

claims Mr Trump pounced. Natasha writes:

:21:28.:21:43.

In response on Twitter Donald Trump says:

:21:44.:21:53.

And of the New York Times' report. He says: "The phoney story is a

:21:54.:22:06.

fabrication." Why are the stories appearing now, trump reporters are

:22:07.:22:11.

convinced there is effectively a conspiracy between the liberal media

:22:12.:22:14.

and Clinton campaign but this many stories from so many different

:22:15.:22:18.

outlets from across the country, well, the women themselves have a

:22:19.:22:22.

simpler explanation. They were enraged by Trump's denial at the

:22:23.:22:25.

third time of asking snubbed's ptedal debate that he'd never made

:22:26.:22:29.

unwanted sexual advances towards him. REPORTER: Just for the record,

:22:30.:22:33.

though, are you saying that what you said on that bus 11 years ago, that

:22:34.:22:38.

you did not actually kiss women without consent or grope women

:22:39.:22:41.

without consent. I have great respect for wi. Nobody has more than

:22:42.:22:45.

I do. For the record you are saying you never did so. I said things -

:22:46.:22:51.

frankly you hear these things. I was embarrassed by t I have tremendous

:22:52.:22:55.

respect for women and women have respect for me Have you ever done

:22:56.:22:59.

these things? I will tell you, no I have not. Donald Trump held a round

:23:00.:23:05.

table this evening. He is due to speak at a rally shortly, promising

:23:06.:23:11.

to come out fighting. He is trying to stop Trump Unshackled from

:23:12.:23:13.

becoming Trump unravelled. Figures from the Home Office show

:23:14.:23:22.

a sharp rise in reports of hate The statistics - from police forces

:23:23.:23:25.

in England and Wales - show a 41% increase in offences

:23:26.:23:29.

in July, the month after Britain The Foreign Secretary,

:23:30.:23:32.

Boris Johnson, says fresh military options are being

:23:33.:23:36.

considered to end the bloodshed in Mr Johnson told MPs that

:23:37.:23:38.

talks with the Russians - who are involved in

:23:39.:23:42.

the city's bombardment - In 2013 MPs blocked military action

:23:43.:23:44.

against Assad's forces. Our Diplomatic Correspondent,

:23:45.:23:47.

James Landale, is outside Military options are being

:23:48.:23:49.

considered but given it could mean being in direct

:23:50.:23:52.

conflict with the Russians. Are they likely to

:23:53.:23:54.

amount to anything? Well, Fiona, nothing is imminent.

:23:55.:24:02.

What the Foreign Secretary was saying is that in his view things

:24:03.:24:05.

have changed. The talks with the Russians have run out of road and

:24:06.:24:10.

people think you cannot let Aleppo carry on being pulverised, to use

:24:11.:24:19.

his word. He said option will be considered and will be considered

:24:20.:24:22.

phone ministers met here at the weekend. They are talking about

:24:23.:24:27.

no-fly zones and no-bombing zones but they would be problematic, it

:24:28.:24:32.

would involve Western Forces having to shoot down and Syrian warplanes.

:24:33.:24:36.

So the Foreign Secretary was saying let's be realistic, not raise false

:24:37.:24:41.

hopes. They are a long way from any US support. Downing Street had a

:24:42.:24:44.

tougher line saying - look, there are no plans for military action.

:24:45.:24:47.

However, the Foreign Secretary believes that the situation has

:24:48.:24:51.

changed and that the public mood has changed, from three years ago when

:24:52.:24:54.

MPs blocked military action. So that's y in that building behind me,

:24:55.:24:58.

the option is back on the table. - so that's why. Thank you, James.

:24:59.:25:04.

She's the poster girl of British track and field, a World Champion,

:25:05.:25:07.

Olympic Champion at London 2012 and won silver at Rio this year

:25:08.:25:09.

but today Jessica Ennis-Hill announced her retirement

:25:10.:25:11.

The heptathlete said she'd made some "amazing memories"

:25:12.:25:14.

Jessica Ennis-Hill has packed more into her

:25:15.:25:24.

career than most of us could

:25:25.:25:28.

dream of but she knows now is the time to say goodbye.

:25:29.:25:31.

World Champion but London 2012 was her defining moment.

:25:32.:25:49.

On Super Saturday the nation held its breath as Ennis-Hill

:25:50.:25:52.

cemented her status as its poster girl.

:25:53.:25:54.

COMMENTATOR: Jessica Ennis is the Olympic champion.

:25:55.:25:58.

It catapulted her into a world of celebrity, and, of course, gave

:25:59.:26:00.

After the Olympics, though, came a different challenge,

:26:01.:26:09.

becoming a wife and then mother to son, Reggie,

:26:10.:26:11.

yet she came back to become World Champion again last year,

:26:12.:26:16.

and in Rio a silver medal made the tears flow as she

:26:17.:26:19.

You know, I've got to go away now and make a big

:26:20.:26:24.

These years have been amazing, just really proud.

:26:25.:26:30.

Those who know the pressure of competing at the highest level

:26:31.:26:32.

understand why she's bowed out at the very top.

:26:33.:26:35.

She's achieved something that most athletes

:26:36.:26:37.

Now she has the next however many years ahead, hopefully

:26:38.:26:47.

being inspirational, supportive and motivational for many

:26:48.:26:49.

Humble, hard working but fiercely determined,

:26:50.:26:52.

Ennis-Hill will go down in British sporting history, as

:26:53.:26:54.

Let's see what the weather has in store for us. Helen Willets is here.

:26:55.:27:07.

Let's see what the weather has in store for us. Helen Willets is here.

:27:08.:27:11.

I thought I would bring you up-to-date with what is happening in

:27:12.:27:16.

bore mu da. We had a category 3 hurricane passing across the

:27:17.:27:21.

Ireland. It is packing a punch, 1235 miles per hour. A steady wind. No

:27:22.:27:28.

doubt destruction here. - 125. Back home the weather is quieter.

:27:29.:27:32.

The storm is moving away from Bermuda as we speak.

:27:33.:27:35.

In the UK easterly wind is chilly. It'll die out into the weaning, not

:27:36.:27:41.

for the meantime. Close to gale in the north. Longer spells of rain for

:27:42.:27:45.

Scotland. Better in eastern Scotland. Fewer showers further

:27:46.:27:49.

south where we will see the lowest temperatures, perhaps a touch of

:27:50.:27:53.

frost in the south-west or West valleys. Even fog for the commute.

:27:54.:27:57.

The commute across Scotland and Northern Ireland with heavy showers,

:27:58.:28:03.

a rumble or two 6 thunder. A raw feel across parts of Scotland. Fewer

:28:04.:28:06.

showers tomorrow further south and more sunshine it start. There could

:28:07.:28:10.

be fog first thing and a chilly start. Here we should keep dry

:28:11.:28:13.

weather. Hopefully more cloud building up through the day. A

:28:14.:28:19.

North-South split. That's because we have cloud from the west and rain

:28:20.:28:24.

from the east. That's when we change wind deprects easterly, which you

:28:25.:28:27.

will notice is still blowing from a gale in the north. So it'll feel

:28:28.:28:31.

chilly here. We are losing the strength of the easterly in the

:28:32.:28:34.

south so perhaps feeling less cold tomorrow. Into the weekend, the rain

:28:35.:28:38.

stuck across eastern Scotland. The easterly wind here and heavy showers

:28:39.:28:42.

elsewhere but we have a southerly, so central and eastern areas, a

:28:43.:28:46.

decent day but unfortunately not the whole weekend. Things even out on

:28:47.:28:50.

Sunday with heavier showers heading eastwards and hopefully drier

:28:51.:28:53.

weather for eastern Scotland. So very autumnal looking.

:28:54.:28:58.

The main story: The company, Unilever, says a deal has been

:28:59.:29:04.

reached with Tesco following a row over a price hike on some of

:29:05.:29:10.

Britain's favourite bravenlteds that's all from us. On BBC

:29:11.:29:11.

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