Because Gordon Brown is away at the NATO summit, Harriet Harperson will today stand in for him at Prime Ministers' Questions.
For the Conservatives, it'll be William Hague.
It's going to be absolute CARNAGE. Watch it today at 12. Unmissable.
A pedant writes: except it's not an "authority" any more. It's no longer nationalised, so it's just called "BAA".
Just like BT is not "British Telecom" any more.
1. Good salary
2. Internet access (which is kind of necessary)
3. The frequent opportunity to see Sophie Raworth, dressed in lycra, in the bike sheds.
4. Do I need anything else? No.
The bloke who stood near me on the South-west terrace and always used to shout out: "Bring on Johnny Byrne!"
Bear in mind this was about 1995, and therefore JB was nowhere to be seen.
I should have said: I don't live in the house (in Carlisle) that I own. I used to, but then my job changed, I moved to London and let out the place up north. The mortgage has just gone up so that plus agents' fees etc is setting me back about £100 a month net.
So I'll actually be BETTER off in...
It's a bit like this. Say I lend you 100 pounds, and you agree to pay me back two pounds a month for fifty months, plus interest.
Then after five months I realise that you're a bit crap at repaying and have missed one payment. But I can't call your loan in, yet, because we've signed an...
They are loans, secured against houses, that are offered to people whose credit rating is not particularly high.
Someone with a good income and a hefty deposit in the bank is a prime customer, and may get a mortgage with a competitive interest rate. A sub-prime customer may have a lower or less...
He's certainly the oldest prisoner in custody -- and for good reason. Last time he was given a few days' release from his open prison, because of his mum's funeral, he went to the birthday party of Kate Kray.