A very cold and early morning run. It certainly prepared me well for another difficult day in the House. The Rwanda Bill has been causing consternation among many of our side of the House because we do not believe it will work and individual claims will soon mount up and we won't see any planes take off. The six-hour debate closed earlier than expected and was followed by five votes. I voted for the amendments that would tighten the Act and prevent the sort of challenges we fear will occur if the Bill goes through in its present state. More than 60 of our colleagues voted for Sir Bill Cash's amendment, more than enough to defeat the Government if repeated at Third Reading. I and my colleagues listened carefully to the arguments today and there will be more tomorrow. The situation became more contentious with the resignation of two Conservative Party deputy chairmen and a ministerial aide. First up for me was another session our Defence Committee in CR15. We took both private and public evidence from Capita Public Service, which has held a contract since 2012 to attract, source and select officers and soldiers for the Army, both regular and reserve. The witnesses were the company's CEO, Richard Holroyd, Maria Mallet, Chief Operating Officer, and Ross Haynes, Head of Public Affairs and Government Relations. You can see the session on Parliament TV. Regrettably, a virtual session with a constituent had to be postponed as the committee meeting went on longer than expected. In other news, the European boss of Fujitsu told MPs that his "gut feel" was staff in the company knew of errors in the Horizon system. A people smuggler who tried to illegally bring a Vietnamese woman into the UK by stuffing her behind the dashboard of his car was jailed. In the Red sea, Yemen's Houthi movement hit another ship. And the US networks declared Donald Trump had won the Iowa Caucuses in just over half an hour, while most votes hadn’t even been counted. It looks like Trump is on his way back.