1. Did civil servants at any point express concerns or offer advice on the suitability of Andy Coulson to be the prime minister's director of communications?

2. Did civil servants express any view or offer advice on the appropriateness of the prime minister's meetings with Rebekah Brooks over Christmas 2010?

3. How many times has the prime minister visited his constituency since the election?

4. According to Downing Street's declaration there have been five meetings between David Cameron and Rebekah Brooks since the election, two of them during Christmas 2010. Were there any other social meetings between Brooks and the prime minister since May 2010?

5. Of the two meetings between Brooks and the prime minister disclosed over Christmas 2010, we understand one relates to a dinner at Brooks's home on 23 December. Was the other a picnic the following day, or a drinks party on Boxing Day?

6. Did the prime minister discuss either the News Corp bid for BSkyB or the phone-hacking scandal at any point with Brooks, James Murdoch or Rupert Murdoch since becoming prime minister?

7. Did any News International executive or journalist offer advice to David Cameron or his staff on who to appoint – or who not to appoint – as the Conservative party's communications director?

8. Did David Cameron meet former News of the World deputy editor Neil Wallis while he was informally advising the party in 2010?

9. Was the prime minister aware at the time that Wallis was advising the party?

10. Was Wallis's unpaid consultancy, valued by the Metropolitan police at £1,000 per day, recorded as a donation to the Conservative party? If not why was it not?