Election day! No, not another general, but a byelection in the Wey Valley ward in Weymouth. Our excellent candidate Tony Ferrari is standing and, judging from people's reaction on the doorstep, he is has a good chance of holding the ward for us. Can I pay tribute to his predecessor, Cory Matthew Russell, the most charming and able councillor who has stood down for personal reasons. If elected, Toni will fill his shoes admirably, and we await the result. Meanwhile, I and my office continue to work with the Home Office to try and get a visa for May Brown's sister. She is the perfect donor as May is suffering from acute myeloid leukaemia and needs a stem cell transplant. I have made this case a priority one and we wait to hear from the Department. I was interviews by a hospital radio in afternoon. John Shepherd runs this wonderful service and he asked me questions on both the future of the SAR helicopter site on Portland and the Land Registry, which the Government threatened to privatise and which I objected to. We managed to get this ill-thought-out move kicked into the long grass and let's hope it stays there. Meanwhile, some backbenchers were debated Sir Philip Green's knighthood, which they want him stripped of. I did not join this debate as I did not agree with its premise. The Chambers is not a court and, as far as I know, Sir Philip has not committed a crime. He may well we wider than wide, immoral and a ruthless so-and-so, but if we agreed debates on this criteria, we'd never leave the Chamber! We have to be careful here and perhaps it should be asked why he received a knighthood in the first place? That, to me, is a wider question and one that I frequently ask myself when I see who does receive an Honour, knowing that there are many in my constituency alone who are far more deserving. I do Mrs May looks at this very carefully. My reply to those constituents who wrote to me about Sir Philip is on this website.