What an extraordinary day. Back to the Commons, where the mood was mixed. The Leave campaign MPs were clearly delighted with the outcome, while the Remain MPs were having difficulty dealing with the outcome of this referendum. I must say that I understand as I would have been equally anxious and frustrated had it gone the other way. The Prime Minister made a gracious and at times humourous statement to the House on the result, reinforcing the point that this was the only referendum in town and there would not be another one. We had a very good meeting of all the Brexit MPs at 1800 and there we let off a little steam, amazed at the outcome of a referendum which the Remain side thought they had in the bag. Regrettably, there is a lot of bile around and one or two colleagues really should know better. I am sure things will calm down in time but in the meantime prospective PMs, or their teams, are beginning to hunt for support and the race is on to find Mr Cameron's replacement. And while we do that, the Labour Party is in meltdown, literally. Resignations to left and right and as fast as new shadow ministers are appointed another one resigns. You have to be here to experience this implosion. Ironically, while Labour MPS were trying to oust Mr Corbyn inside the Palace, about 1,000 Corbynistas had gathered in Parliament Square to shout their support for him. I was told by a Labour MP that most of the crowd were from the hard Left and not representative of Labour supporters across the country. What a day!