The weather today rather reflected the political mood following last night's chaotic scenes in the Commons. The Prime Minister said Sir Lindsay Hoyle's decision to depart from convention during a debate on the Gaza conflict was "very concerning". Certainly it was and many MPs were calling for the Speaker to go. I am not one of them. We know enough from reports at the time that the Speaker was got at by Starmer, who wanted procedure broken to prevent many of his own MPs from voting with the SNP's motion. Sadly, the Speaker caved in, putting himself at odds with the House and undermining our confidence in him. The government laid out how they would clear the names of sub-postmasters wronged in the Horizon scandal. The Scout Association and one of its employees were referred to the police following an inquest into the death of a 16-year-old boy. Abroad, Alexei Navalny's mother said she had been shown his body, but that the Russian authorities were pressuring her to allow a "secret" burial. No surprise there. I was due to visit residents in Swanage, but those I was meeting advised against it as it was heaving with rain. Instead, I ploughed through the parliamentary in-tray. I was especially pleased that my intervention had helped one constituent get the garden around her house fenced. It's always a huge pleasure when helping someone like this succeeds.