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I suppose her bad day and that of an Orchard Park resident vastly differ. Linda said to Austin it is difficult to be a mum and she considers that is the core issue during the making of the series. McDougall, obviously, personally found it difficult to be a mother herself. It is the one thing I did not hear any of the mothers on the estate complain about. Austin's attitude is that cooking, children and housework are women's work and this must have put stress on his wife as a young mother. Austin phoned his to wife for help when he was left babysitting for his second host, unemployed chef, Dave. He said in the call 'the food is all over the floor and the baby's shat itself...', I don't know what leaving the MP to babysit was meant to prove. It is hardly likely that most 75-year-olds, with no experience, would be left babysitting.

Hull North MP Diana Johnston was invited, with the residents, to dinner by Linda, Austin's wife. This gave the high-rise residents the chance to discuss their concerns with their MP. Dave, another host to Austin and Linda, spoke intelligently, as ever, about bailing out the banks while people who cannot pay back money to the banks are made homeless. Dave is an unemployed qualified chef forced to cook family meals in a microwave as the local authority want to charge him £80 to connect his gas cooker. Austin Mitchell said surely this was the responsibility of the property owner and not the tenant. Dave gambles to make money and said it is like Alistair Darling gambling with the UK economy. Dave questioned Austin about his expenses and asked if he had to pay back any expenses. Austin said facetiously he had to pay back a few bottles of wine and a jar of pickles and crinkly crisps; he forgot to mention the £10000. Dave said out of £60000 he was amazed he could not afford to feed himself. Dave asked: 'how can MPs say what benefit claimants need to live on if they do not know the price of anything?'

Mark Oaten was aware of their canvassing while living on the estate. He heard them say if there were less people, houses could be built and they could move out of these tower blocks. Part of the BNP's 'Welfare and Housing Policy' states: 'make all...social housing only available to British citizens...' The residents are willing to believe anyone who will offer them a glimmer of hope away from their intolerable living conditions.

LibDem Roger Williams is the elected member for Welshpool, home to Nick Griffin. Mr Griffin is a Cambridge graduate and lives in an exclusive stone farmhouse in the Welsh hills. His two-acre, exclusive property is guarded by dogs, CCTV cameras and alarms. His political manoeuvres are described by his wife as 'a game' (Times 14 June 2009). I have no idea how close the nearest BNP councillor is to Nick's hilltop retreat - Barking probably. The only thing Nick Griffin is interested in is finding fodder for his race hate agenda. You would think he would like to live close to others who were supportive of his politics. In depth details about hkc p776a reviews can be found at main website.