Out for a run and then into the Commons. I entered the Chamber at the tail-end of Justice Questions to attend the UQ on Personal Independence Payments (PIPs). The UQ was brought on the basis the Government had lost a Tribunal case brought by a claimant. Rather than challenge the decision, the new Secretary of State, the very able Esther McVey, accepted it and said she'd do all she could to put it right. It is not unusual for Governments to face decisions like this, although Labour sadly politicised the session, which is a shame considering that in the last Parliament spending on disability support rose by a staggering £3 billion. And let's not forget the reason for this new PIP. Its predecessor, Disability Living Allowance, did not sufficiently recognise mental health impacts. Anyway, I have some experience of this and other allowances in the constituency and in some cases a wrong decision can cause a lot of unnecessary stress for the claimant. I've always felt that more home visits would ensure a more accurate way of judging what support a claimant is entitled to. I asked this very question, to be told that claimants were already entitled to a home visit but few understood this. Ms McVey said she's ensure this point was clarified. I think the point is, though, that the company that runs this service is reluctant to carry out too many home visits. It was an interesting session nevertheless. Later in the afternoon, I attended a meeting of the ERG, a pro Brexit organisation, whose new chairman is my friend and colleague Jacob Rees-Mogg MP. Although the meeting was in confidence, I can say that it was well attended, that Jacob was warmly welcomed as the new chairman, and that we discussed many Brexit issues for over an hour before the meeting broke up.