What's happening
Today French Socialist leader and presidential candidate Francois Hollande visits London and meets Ed Miliband
7.45 Deputy prime minister Nick Clegg and care minister Paul Burstow visit a North London academy to announce an additional £22m for the Children and Young People's Improving Access to Psychological Therapies programme
9.00 The UN Human Rights Council continues with an urgent debate on Syria; a vote on a draft resolution is possible
Today Environment secretary Caroline Spelman announces £60m of funds for the Rural Economy Grant Scheme
9.15 Phillip Hammond attends an Olympics air security exercise at RAF Waddington in Lincoln
9.30 Ofsted chief inspector Sir Michael Wilshaw gives evidence to the education select committee on his annual report
9.45 Governor of the Bank of England Mervyn King appears at Treasury select committee session on the Bank's inflation report
10.00 Chair of the home affairs select committee Keith Vaz speaks at a debate discussing the impact of government immigration policy on the UK's higher education sector
12.00 Prime minister's questions takes place in the House of Commons. Later on, the House considers a motion put by Bill Cash on the legality of using European Union institutions to implement the fiscal pact agreed by 25 EU nations
13.00 Cabinet Office minister Oliver Letwin and economic secretary to the Treasury Chloe Smith give evidence to the environment, food and rural affairs select committee on the Natural Environment White Paper
13.30 The US GDP figures for Q4 are released
15.00 The House of Lords continues with the report stage of the Health and Social Care Bill and considers the Commons amendments to the Welfare Reform Bill
16.30 Equalities minister Lynne Featherstone hosts an event on body image in the media at the UN in New York
19.00 Ed Balls gives a talk to the Mile End Group on 'being shadow chancellor'
What's been said
For bankers and politicians just to be sorry is not enough. Shame is a profound and powerful force, says Gaby Hinsliff in The Guardian
Are sleeping pills really that bad for your health? Damian Thompson in the Daily Telegraph
Christina Patterson in The Independent deplores the lack of difference between the two main candidates in London's mayoral election
Now that Boris really wants to be mayor, he may not be able to cling on to it, says Alice Thomson in The Times
