Pic: SNP Westminster leader Angus Robertson at PMQspublished at 12:17

Labour says Ken Livingstone will not have a formal role in its defence review, which will consider policy on Trident
Shadow defence secretary Emily Thornberry says the review will be based on evidence and will aim to publish its interim findings in June
Jean-Claude Juncker says agreement on the UK's EU re-negotiations is likely next month
More than a million benefits claimants may be facing destitution after disappearing from the welfare system, Labour ex-minister Frank Field claims.
Head teachers warn the system for creating new school places in England is fragmented and confusing, risking harm to children's education
Jackie Storer and Gavin Stamp
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Mr Corbyn quotes another council tenant - Linda - who says she has to downsize and lose her secure home thanks to government housing policy.
Mr Cameron says the government is cutting social rents and the "spare room subsidy" does not affect pensioners like Linda.
Classic dividing line stuff here from Cameron - Labour doesn't believe in home ownership, he says, just as it doesn't believe in defence and has a leader "that doesn't believe in Britain". And that's his final word to Mr Corbyn for this week.
Jeremy Corbyn speaks up for people on the living wage, claiming only 2% of them will be able to afford Mr Cameron's "starter homes" and says home ownership has fallen under his premiership.
Mr Cameron says he hopes those on the living wage will be able to afford starter homes - and asks the Labour leader what he is frightened of when it comes to offering the 1.3 million housing association tenants the right to buy their homes.
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Jeremy Corbyn reads out a question from a council tenant - Darryl - asking for a guarantee that people ejected from their homes when they are bulldozed will be offered new council homes in the same area.
David Cameron accuses the Labour leader of denying people the opportunity to get on life - accusing Mr Corbyn of being a "small c conservative".
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Mr Cameron has not thought his housing plans through, says Mr Corbyn. Will leaseholders already living on these estates be guaranteed homes on the rebuilt ones? "I accept this isn't as carefully thought through as his reshuffle," says Mr Cameron in reply as he gets a second week of fun out of last week's lengthy shadow cabinet reshuffle.
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Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn heads off with a question on the government plans to bulldoze "sink estates", saying the money pledged by Mr Cameron only adds up to £1.4m per housing estate. He says "it is a drop in the ocean".
Trident now - Mr Cameron stresses his commitment to an "independent nuclear deterrent," saying Labour has "some very serious questions to answer on the issue".
Labour's Bill Esterson kicks off with an attack on plans to scrap grants for student nurses. David Cameron says the changes will bring an extra 10,000 nurses into the NHS.
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David Cameron is on his feet in the Commons.
Wales questions
House of Commons
Parliament
Shadow Wales Secretary Nia Griffith attacks the government's Northern Powerhouse for offering "no benefit to North Wales" and asks when rail electrification will be coming to the region.
Wales Minister, Alun Cairns, says "a considerable amount of investment" has gone into to improving signalling and rail lines in North Wales.
Jeremy Corbyn will probably go for the junior doctors row, says BBC Political editor Laura Kuenssberg, but he has surprised us before, she adds.
Labour shadow minister Jonathan Ashworth is asked if Labour will have a unified position when MPs vote on Trident renewal, which is expected to happen later this year.
"We always try to get a collective position," says Mr Ashworth, but he concedes there are likely to be public differences on an issue that the party leader Jeremy Corbyn feels very strongly about.
"It's probably not desirable but I suspect it is inevitable," he adds.