Well, i suppose it is inheriting good genes, for a start, and an outlook of. A cheerful outlook, i think, optimistic outlook on life. And as the republic of ireland move five points clear in their group with a win over gibraltar, Northern Ireland, scotland, and wales will play euro 2020 qualifiers tonight. Good morning and welcome to the bbc news at nine. Three more candidates for the conservative Party Leadership contest launch their campaigns today to replace theresa may and become the countrys next Prime Minister. Ten candidates have been confirmed as official contenders to replace her after securing the backing of at least eight other mps. Andrea leadsom will set out her plans in 45 minutes time pledging action on climate change. Mark harper will call for tax cuts for those on lower incomes. And rory stewart is focusing on what he says is sensible spending criticising his rivals for offering what he called eye watering tax cuts as a cheap electoral bribe to win over party members. Borisjohnson hasnt launched his campaign yet, but has been backed by former conservative Party Leader Iain Duncan Smith who said mrjohnson is the candidate most likely to take britain out of the eu by the deadline of the end of october. We can now cross to westminster to speak to our assistant Political Editor norman smith. Good morning, norman. Andrea leadsom, harper and sunni rory stewart, how will they make themselves stand out in the crowded field . Harper and themselves stand out in the crowded field . Harperand rory themselves stand out in the crowded field . Harper and rory stewart . Andrea leadsom is pitching herself as optimistic but realistic as a brexiteer, her picture as a managed exit, a sort of orderly no deal. She is calling for calling for a cross party is calling for calling for a Cross Party Commission on social care, an issue powered by successive governments. Rory stewart has sort of position himself as the honest broker, the man telling it how it is, accusing other candidates have misleading people about the possibility of getting a new brexit deal, saying this is the deal we have been offered, you will have to find the numbers in the commons to back it and attacking what he calls i watering spending pledges by some other candidates. Mark harper has been a little bit beneath the radio so far, he has set out his stall is the man to try to cut taxes and help those at the bottom end of the income scale, in contrast to, say, borisjohnson who yesterday proposed a huge tax cut for better off families. They will be trying to break through but it looks like an uphill task given the sort of support they had so far and the fact that trying to get her to end you have ten candidates is difficult. Trying to get heard when you had ten candidates. As Prime Minister i would propose to put my plan, which i have already published, to the house of commons immediately, and therefore show the European Union that this plan is deliverable through the house of commons. That is in principle. Sorry, i slightly jumped commons. That is in principle. Sorry, i slightlyjumped the gun, that was matt hancock. He was interesting because he has floated the idea, if he becomes Prime Minister, of putting his brexit plan to the commons within days. He suggests there would be a vote in the commons in principle on his deal. This is a hugely high Risk Strategy because the danger is it gets voted down within a few days of him being appointed Prime Minister and his premiership goes into a nosedive. I had a quick chat with him this morning and said it will not happen because he will have a new mandate, mps would describe it as catastrophic anti parliament backed deal he hopes it would give him the momentum to get the eu to budge on key issues like the backstop. Elsewhere, sajid javid has tried to come through the middle, he has not quite manage to dominate the headlines and will be launching tomorrow, this morning he set out some of his thinking. The three things we need to deliver which are absolutely essential, brexit by the end of october this year, unifying the country, bringing people together, keeping corbyn out of numberten and people together, keeping corbyn out of number ten and i think my background, Life Experience and vision for the future will deliver oii vision for the future will deliver on all three. If you dont have a deal by the end of october, would you delay brexit, would you call a general election . I have set out a very detailed brexit plan which i think its the most credible out there andl think its the most credible out there and i look forward to talking about it more. Would you go out with no deal . If we want a deal, and that is where my focus will be, but if we got to the end of october and the choice was between no deal and no brexit, i would choice was between no deal and no brexit, iwould pick choice was between no deal and no brexit, i would pick no deal. Sam gyimah pulled out yesterday, the only candidate to drop out recently. He has openly advocated another referendum and he said that idea was not welcomed in any reaches of the tory party. Nevertheless all the other contenders now seem to be looking for his support. I still had all of them contacting me overnight, desperate to talk to me overnight, desperate to talk to me and wanting my support. So clearly my endorsement, given my position, its not something. So give it now . I have not decided, because the question which i think every contestant should answer now, not when they get the job, what is your plan be when you try to do what theresa may did and failed . The one that gives me the most persuasive answer is the one that will get my support. What can we expect today . We get the launchers by the three other candidates, we had two more tomorrow, sajid javid and, at long last, borisjohnson tomorrow, sajid javid and, at long last, Boris Johnson emerges tomorrow, sajid javid and, at long last, borisjohnson emerges into the spotlight with his launch. This afternoon, we get the first formal hustings photo backbenchers where all the candidates will have to go in front of them and pitch, but there are ten candidates let hustings for tory backbenchers. It will be hustings this afternoon and tomorrow afternoon because there are ten candidates. Thank you very much, norman. And on tuesday 18thjune bbc one will be hosting a live election hustings between the candidates for conservative leader one of them will be the person who moves in to downing street. The debate will be shaped by your questions and were asking you to submit them in advance. Email haveyoursay bbc. Co. Uk with your question and include your name and Contact Number if youre interested in asking it live on the night. The Charity Commission will publish its report into how oxfam handled serious sexual abuse allegations later today. Its been looking into claims that some of the charitys staff used young prostitutes when they were in haiti after the earthquake in 2010. Oxfam has repeatedly apologised. Asmita naik is a consultant on International Human rights and co author of a 2002 report on Sexual Exploitation in west africa. It is very good to have you with us, and given your experience, your thoughts on what might or might not happen today. But tell us about the report you co authored into thousand and two, looking at areas which were being helped by eight agencies. Which you co authored in asmita naik. Co authored in fares. Did you find that there were mechanisms to report concerns . Back in 2002 it was an unexpected finding as part of a trip to west africa, a group of us found there were 48 agencies implicated in the Sexual Exploitation of refugee children across three west african countries and in several refugee camps, it was the most heinous type of abuse. 48 agencies . Many well known has held names, reports available on the International Development committee website. It was heinous, they were children under 18, it was basically hit supplies, a bar of soap, biscuits, a tarpaulin sheet. In terms of safeguarding a mechanism to report concerns, whether any . This was back in 2002, that was the first time the issue came to the global agenda and after that various measures were put in place. There was a lot of work at policy level following that report. What did that specifically recommend you try to avoid the situation happening again . Codes of conduct and Complaints Procedures and all of those things we re procedures and all of those things were in that report and in the follow up that happened afterwards, there were Many International working group set up under the auspices of the un and the un secretary general issued a policy and a bulletin and a code of conduct, so much was done and that continued over the years, certainly in policy terms lots of thinking has been done in terms of tackling these issues. So response and policy level, but on a practical level, on the ground, did anything change . That has always been the issue, the lack of implementation on the ground, which is why when the oxfam scandal broke last year it was really no surprise, these policies have been on the shelf of a long time, everyone has signed codes of conduct since 2002 but nobody has been held to account. You have been very vocal in saying the public should not give money to charities implicated in this kind of scandal u nless implicated in this kind of scandal unless they can prove that they have changed their ways and put procedures in place to ensure safeguarding of venerable people in the areas where they work. I dont know what you expect from the Charity Commission report, but what would you like to see . We can anticipate it will be very critical, from the early press coverage it sounds like that will be the case, thatis sounds like that will be the case, that is important that the Charity Commission holds oxfam to account, but my real concern is it is a little bit too late, this is ten yea rs on little bit too late, this is ten years on from when the incident took place in 2010 and the Charity Commission report will not offer redress to the victims or do anything to the perpetrators because they are long gone and have worked in the sector for many years. It is a rap on the knuckles for oxfam. You wa nt a rap on the knuckles for oxfam. You wantan a rap on the knuckles for oxfam. You want an International Ombudsman, how would that role work . The thing really missing as there needs to be complaints mechanisms on the ground at the point of delivery, we do not need something to be looked at ten yea rs need something to be looked at ten years down the road, we need something there and then that people can relate to and then there needs to be an independent mechanism to back that up, like an International Ombudsman which can act as an appeal function, people are not satisfied with how their complaints are handled. There could be an independent review there and then in cases can be dealt with. If that had existed in 2010 we would not be here now, because whoever campaigned in oxfa m now, because whoever campaigned in oxfam about what was going on in haiti would have had immediate recourse to an independent body. Thank you for sharing your findings with us, asmita naik, International Human rights consultant. We expect the report from the Charity Commission this lunchtime. Nurseries in some of the poorest areas in england say they could be forced to close because theyre not being paid enough to run a government policy. Local authorities receive just under £5 an hour to fund free care for three and four year olds in term time. But the Early Years Alliance says a survey of childcare providers suggests that leaves them with a shortfall. Olivia richwald reports. If you do, the big, bad mouse will be after you. This nursery in bradford serves a deprived part of yorkshire. Many children need extra support. The staff are highly trained but its getting harder to cover the costs. Our funding went down and yet our costs have all increased because National Living wage and minimum wage is going up, year on year. Its getting tighter and tighter. Free early years education has been incredibly popular with parents, but for years now nurseries have been telling the government theyre just not getting enough money to do the kind ofjob they want to do. So, as a result, more and more nurseries are now charging parents or asking them for a financial contribution. But in some places, thats just not possible. Parents here are asked to contribute just £12 a year for a farm trip, and thats paid in instalments. A survey of more than 350 providers for the Early Years Alliance found that more than 40 had cut back on buying learning resources and almost 20 had reduced the quality of their food. Theyre starting to reduce the quality of staff that they recruit, they invest less into training and they will accept less children from disadvantaged backgrounds. That surely is the complete opposite of what this government argues it should be doing in terms of social mobility. The government says its spending £3. 5 billion on early years education this year alone, and lower income families can get extra help via universal credit. Olivia richwald, bbc news, bradford. The Early Years Alliance says a survey of childcare providers suggests that leaves them with a shortfall. Well neil leitch, the chief executive of the eya joins me now. Neil, you are very welcome. What stories have you heard at the Early Years Alliance about the difficulties that the funding that exists leaves these early years evaders with in terms of delivering the quality of service you would like to see . In the last two years, Something Like 8000 providers have close their doors, come out of the sector. In the last three months alone we have lost 1000 childminders. We operate in areas of deprivation ourselves, we have closed 25 of our nurseries in the last 12 months. This is notjust rhetoric or speculation, this is people who have been in business for 20 or 25 years, outstanding nurseries, closing their doors because there is not enough funding in the system. What difference does it make when a provider in an area of high deprivation has to close, to those children, their families and the outcomes of those children as they grow older . All evidence shows that if you help the most disadvantaged, you read the benefits further down the line, whether through health, crime, you invest at the earliest point and get the biggest return. So when you are closing settings in the very areas that the government argues it wants to help in terms of social mobility, the effect is enormous, so those families go to the bottom of the pile, frankly. Is your conclusion at this stage that the government as it stands, with its funding model, cannot afford to Fund Early Years provision . This was a lastminute promisejust provision . This was a lastminute promise just before an election to say we will give more free childcare. No computation whatsoever, no discussion with the sector. I cant see how they can deliver unless they reprioritise their money. There is not enough funding in the system, there is about a 20 shortfall. And four year olds, you make the promise, you have to put in the money. 20 shortfall for three rebels and four year olds. Money. 20 shortfall for three rebels and fouryearolds. Can you think of another model which might be an alternative without the extra funding . No, much of the sector is on its knees. In the last few months we have spent 8. 25 billion p building 6. 5 miles of railtrack for the hsz building 6. 5 miles of railtrack for the hs2 link which has gone from budget of 34 billion to around £100 billion, we will find the money. So why cant we find the money for early yea rs . Why cant we find the money for early years . We do it when we want to. Reprioritise, if you make that promise, adequately fund it. Thank you for coming along, neil leitch, chief executive of the Early Years Alliance. The headlines on bbc news. Three of the ten candidates for the conservative leadership launch their campaigns today to replace theresa may. The Charity Commission will publish its report into how oxfam handled allegations of Sexual Misconduct by some staff in haiti. Nurseries in some of englands poorest areas say they are facing closure because of a shortfall in government funding. In sport, the republic of ireland won in euro 2020 qualifying last night. Northern ireland face belarus, helping to keep their 100 record intact. Wales and scotland play. England can qualify for the knockout stage of the womens world cup with a win in their next match after the next opponents argentina drew with japan yesterday. Tiger woods will hope to win his second major of the season when play begins at the us open on thursday. Having won the masters, he failed to make the cut at the pga last month. More to come on all those stories later in the hour. Thank you, see you soon. Mps have condemned employers using gagging clauses to silence workers complaining about Unlawful Discrimination and harassment. Maria miller, chair of the women and equalities committee, has told the bbc that non disclosure agreements are having a destructive effect on peoples lives and should be banned. Rianna croxford reports. Retail tycoon sir philip green exposed for using nondisclosure agreements to silence staff hes claimed to have bullied and sexually harassed. Allegations he strongly denies. But theyre not just tools for the rich and powerful. Theyre widely used across th