Up early and out into the park for a run. Into the office for a while before attending a Whips' briefing at 1015 on matters for today. Then out into a grey, overcast day to walk to the Treasury to meet minister Robert Jenrick. The aim was to secure some funding to pay for the work needed to repair the harbour walls in Weymouth and to upgrade our flood defences. Some £22 million is needed. I had asked Mr Jenrick a few days ago at Treasury Questions what money was available for coastal towns and he kindly invited me to go and see him. So I did. He and his official were most helpful and are going to let me know whether the Environment Agency can help and, if it cannot, which I don't think it can, whether a one-off payment would be possible from the Treasury. Even a few million would help. By the time I headed back to the Commons for PMQs, it was pouring down. Straight into the Chamber at about 1135 where I took my usual seat and waited for the weekly boxing match. Corbyn was not impressive at all and again appeared stuck to his script. He does not have that natural ability at the Despatch Box that David Cameron had, to give him his due. The Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt then stood up at the Despatch Box and delivered a bombshell. He apologised for an IT breakdown that has resulted in c450,000 women, aged between 68 and 71, not being invited to their final breast screening. It's been estimated that between 135 to 270 women may have had their lives shortened as a result. You could have heard a pin drop, the Chamber went so quiet. This really is bad news and my heart goes out to all those affected. Mr Hunt said he'd do all he could to ensure this never happened again and has launched an investigation into what went wrong. His Statement is on my website. A Ten Minute Rule Motion followed before we got on to the main Opposition debate, called by Corbyn. The motion was not credible, despite the fact the topic - Windrush generation - was. It demanded that all the papers, correspondence, emails and text messages between ministers, senior officials and special advisers linked to the Immigration Acts of 2014 and 2016 should be handed to the Home Affairs' Committee. As you can imagine, the answer was, no. Government would cease to work if this ever became a regular requirement. Corbyn knows this but wanted to continue to play politics with the Windrush affair. I sat in the Chamber for Dianne Abbot's opening salvo, which was a damp squib. She hardly took any interventions and droned on in her normal sanctimonious way. Let's be straight about this; no one is happy with the Windrush affair and the new Home Secretary Sajid Javid has made it a top priority to sort out, and he will.