I think a coffee table is one of the most important things. It's where everything happens.

I think if people want to have surgery then fine, if it makes you feel better, brilliant. But it does annoy me when you're being accused of it, and it's not nice when people are commenting being like 'Eughh, what has she done to her face?' And I'm like 'Oh my god, I've done nothing, this is actually my face.'

I keep all my Sunday papers out, I keep them all week and then I change them every Sunday.

I try not to engage with those people who leave nasty comments.

I often wonder if my relationships don't work out because I am the more Alpha one and the focus is on me and men don't like that.

I'd like to prove that just because I'm on a TV show about the area that I live in, it doesn't mean that I can't do anything, that I'm not strong - and I really hope that I show that.

I'm very jolly by nature but I get very upset when my skin is bad, I dread leaving the house.

I think you have to have really thick skin to be in politics - which I just lack. I think I'm just too nice!

I get labelled a ditzy, blonde reality TV person, which is fine.

I'm very conscious that I've spent my whole adult life in the public eye.

I've been on freshers' week twice, that's the only degree I have.

I get snappy if I don't eat.

We see acne and spots as an imperfection and I've gone to great lengths to cover it up with lots of foundation. And everyone thinks 'Toff's perfect' but I mask my imperfections.

I wish I could walk around with no make-up on, but I have big angry red marks all down the side of my cheeks. Some people don't understand how badly it affects my confidence and upsets me.

I have my opinions but to go into politics you have to be very clever, which I'm not!

In SW1 you don't really need survival skills, you just exist.

When I walk down the street people shout from their cars and their vans.

I just used to go up to London a lot and hang around SW3.

I am a massive fan of tele. When I have an evening off I just crash in front of the sofa and binge. I love it.

It's important to remember, most people have been bullied, and it makes you a stronger person in the long run.

I love going on dates. They're like social experiments and it's an excuse to get dressed up. Even if you don't get on, it's a funny experience to tell the girls.

I'm so public about my love life I'm really not trying to hide anything.

I think I've been completely underestimated in the past because of my blonde hair.

I've been on a very long, bumpy journey with my skin for over ten years.

People put me in this ditzy, posh and stuck-up category, so it's been nice the public have been able to see the real me.

I'm very lucky I went to a nice school and I live in a very lovely part of London.

Some people are made to be famous and do photo shoots, but I'm not one of them. I'm more comfortable in the library!

I started to speak about my acne struggles on social media and in interviews, and people responded really well to it.

I really prefer to be positive.

I still wear makeup, but I'm no longer hiding behind pot after pot of foundation or endless filters on Instagram.

I believe that the traditions of our country should be upheld and I'm a real advocate of business.

My friends went on gap years and I just stayed in London.

I read Jilly Cooper when I was on the verge of just growing up and I was becoming a woman.

The human mind can be sexy.

I seem to fancy middle-aged men, weirdly.

I really do have this thing for middle-aged politicians.

Celebrities are often perceived as these perfect beings but I didn't feel like that and the more I shouted from the rooftops about my bad skin, the more people realised I'm just a normal girl with normal insecurities.

Social media is such a powerful tool and I would love it to be a hub of celebration rather than focusing on negativity.

I do quite like rice and beans weirdly, I don't know how or why. For me I always eat my beans first one by one and then savour the rice because it is bloody fantastic.

I've been called pizza face and others said my skin was full of craters - it's just so horrible when people pin point something that you feel so badly about.

I have this thirst for knowledge that I can't ever satisfy.

I think the problem is I really wear my heart on my sleeve, so when I like someone I tell them how it is.

What I don't like is when people don't like the establishment, they don't like the current government, they combat that by saying 'I don't like politics.' Go out, have your say, vote against the government. It's the most important thing.

I love my heated rollers at home. Heat them up and pop them in and put the make up on and then it is a big beautiful bouncy blow dry.

When you look at Westminster you think of it as pale, male and stale and I hate that so much.

At heart, I am a country girl who grew up in Devon.

The way I am makes it difficult for guys; I do my own thing the whole time, I'm so independent. If there's someone else in my life I often forget and carry on as normal.

Having social media does open you up to trolling, and mine is always about my skin.

I see comments occasionally about the way I speak but it goes straight over my head. You speak the way you speak and it is a silly thing to judge someone on.

Basically, I'm a bit of a nerd and I've always wanted to solve a Rubik's Cube.