South of England MPs who can't pay, or won't pay.
The public apply one test to their MPs over expenses: Do they get it?
Does this elected representative really understand why the general public are so angry that it seems to be one rule for them and one rule for the rest of us?
And on this morning's evidence there are still MPs for whom that penny hasn't dropped.
You can rule out the big claimants. They had no option. The double-bubble MPs Andrew MacKay and Julie Kirkbride are toast already - though of course they'll get twice the resettlement to help pay the whopping £60,436 they're repaying.
The Duck House MP Sir Peter Viggers gets some sympathy from the High Court judge who's been hearing MPs' appeals for leniency - but still owes £13,245.80 - and unless he pays up David Cameron says that will come out of his resettlement.
Bournemouth's John Butterfill, who claimed for "staff quarters", repaid £17,478 when the scandal broke, but now is told by Legg he only owes £2364. Does he get a refund?
And now we get to the interesting stuff. Three MPs who David Cameron has put in front bench jobs are still arguing the toss over their expenses.
Aldershot MP Gerald Howarth has tried to test the £1,000 limit on gardening expenses and was pleased to get a response that admitted the rules were arbitary.
New Forest MP Julian Lewis is aggrieved he didn't get the full £789 of a washer dryer. Rather than accept the £550 he's been offered from the taxpayer he's asked the High Court judge to get us to pay the rest. The answer was no.
And Oxfordshire rising star Ed Vaizey defied his leader's wishes to dispute the ruling on just £35.42. OK he's a lawyer. Ok he's paid back a lot more than is being demanded anyway.
But shouldn't these people just let it rest, accept that life is unfair, and pay up now?

Welcome to the hustings! I'm Peter Henley, the BBC's political reporter in the south of England. From parish councils in Sussex, to European politics in Oxford, this is the blog for you.
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