All you need to know about day one of the 2006 Conservative conference:
MONDAY'S AGENDA
0910 - 0940
Hot Topic Debate: Should marketing to children be banned?
0940 - 1100
Public services: David Willetts, shadow education and skills secretary
Andrew Lansley, shadow health secretary
1100 - 1245
Crime debate:
Camilla Batmanghelidjh, Kids Company
David Davis, shadow home secretary
Shami Chakrabarti, Liberty
Norman Brennan, Victims of Crime Trust
John Timoney, Miami Chief of Police
1415 - 1445
Hot Topic Debate: are cheap flights a false economy?
1445 - 1600
Environment debate: Peter Ainsworth, shadow environment secretary
Chris Grayling, shadow transport secretary
Zac Goldsmith, ecologist
Jeanette Winterson, author and environmentalist
Peter Kendall, National Farmers' Union
1610 - 1640
Social action
1640 - 1730
Meet the candidates
Theresa May, shadow Commons leader
Oliver Letwin, chairman, Conservative Research Department
Ann Widdecombe MP
Rachel Elnaugh, ex-BBC Dragon's Den panel
CONFERENCE CATCH-UP
Tory leader David Cameron is facing new pleas to commit the Conservative Party to a policy of tax cuts.
A charity has criticised George Osborne after he appeared to suggest Gordon Brown could be "faintly autistic".
Conservative chairman Francis Maude apologises after hundreds of people have to queue for hours to get into the party's conference.
Civil liberties campaigner Shami Chakrabati calls for an end to the "pit bull posturing of home secretaries who would be king", during a speech at the Tories' conference.
Children are entitled to a childhood and parents need help to realise this right, shadow education secretary David Willetts has said.
Tory activists deal a blow to David Cameron's green credentials by voting against a move highlighting the damage no frills flights cause climate change.
A would-be Tory MP's plan to make all new homes capable of generating their own energy has won a "Dragons' Den" style competition.
CONFERENCE DIARY
Is David Cameron on a mission to wind up all of his former bosses? Carlton TV - who employed Mr Cameron in the 1990s as a PR man - might well be a little miffed by the subject of Monday's "hot topic" debate on whether TV advertising to kids should be banned? While Tuesday's debate: alcohol does more harm than drugs, should make interesting viewing for his former colleagues at Urbium, the late night bar chain where Mr Cameron was until recently a director.
No wonder Mr Cameron wants to scrap ID cards. If the almighty scrum on Sunday as delegates and journalists queued up to get their passes is anything to go by, handing out little plastic cards with personal details on them might not be the party's forte. Party workers were blaming the police but that was little consolation for the hundreds of activists who missed Mr Cameron's big opening speech.
"You could walk that way, sir, but we'd have to shoot you." Not David 'SAS hard man' Davis warming up for his big speech but a police officer offering a bit of friendly advice to a lost member of the media pack.
From David Cameron's speech: "Tony Blair says it's all style and no substance. In fact he wrote me a letter about it. Dear Kettle ... You're black. Signed Pot."
BEST OF THE BLOGS
Mr Cameron's opening conference speech was quite well received over at ConservativeHome.
One poster said: "As usual, he bashed the government quite well and is a decent orator. I agree with much of his analysis of Labour incompetence."
Another remarked: "Pointing out where Labour have quickly come out with ill-thought policies, served to highlight there incompetence but to subtly suggest that we should not make the same mistake in an attempt to appease certain groups."
The blog was similarly enthusiastic about Mr Cameron's performance on Sunday AM.
"It was a confident performance - David Cameron looked relaxed and offered no encouragement to those who are demanding tax cuts now."
There was also much debate about tax, with an item about backbencher Greg Hands' call for a flatter tax system.
Tory A-lister and arch blogger Iain Dale, meanwhile, reckoned Mr Cameron's speech "didn't quite reach the giddy heights of last year but that wasn't the purpose".
"He wanted to set out where he saw the party going over the next twelve months...The peroration was a mixture of Kennedy-esque language with a pseudo-religious overtone about light triumphing over dark."
PHOTO OF THE DAY

The Tories' first couple take the Bournemouth air
QUOTE OF THE DAY
"The papers claim David Cameron wants us to hug a hoodie. Well I support that. The only difference between David and me is that I might just hug a little harder. And a little longer."
Shadow home secretary David Davis in his conference speech.
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