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.

I think sometimes my skin has been so bad I was embarrassed to seek help.

I dropped out twice from a law degree because I didn't have time to do everything at once.

I think what the Conservatives have done, scaling back welfare payment, is overwhelmingly positive. There's only a certain amount of welfare they can give out.

I think for so long I've hidden. I think actually now I'm in the limelight, I don't want everyone who follows me to think I'm perfect.

I left school and went straight into 'Made In Chelsea' - I've never had any challenge.

I want everyone to work to be equal!

I pay my rent with my Instagram.

I don't think people should be judged for their background.

It's not all about looks. If someone can sustain a good intellectual 'conversation, I find that very 'attractive.

I really like walking through Brompton Cemetery. It's really peaceful.

I love reading, I'm such a bookworm.

I don't travel light with my beauty box when I travel.

I don't like doing really rigorous exercise. I don't mind a bit of yoga.

My parents have never given me anything on a plate.

When I left school I was meant to do my law degree but I was lucky to fall into something I love.

I always assumed skincare brands would only want to work with people who have perfect skin but that wasn't the case which was a huge confidence boost for me.

I've realised you don't gain validation from other people just because you have perfect skin or hair, it comes from the inside and I feel brighter and happier since I made peace with, and begun to accept, my spots.

Because of how I grew up and on 'Made In Chelsea,' I never had any challenge.

I thought that everyone would just think I was a bit of a joke as a writer.

With my reading, I like something with quite a happy ending.

I don't like anything too heavy. Something I can read, you know, lying in bed that takes me to different world.

I don't care where people come from, but others are fascinated about where I come from.

My voice is so recognisable. I'm like a foghorn walking round shops on my phone.

By nature I'm not very confident.

It was massive deal for me to be filmed without my makeup because I've tried hard for years not to show my spots.

There have been a lot of crossover with celebrities and politics but to me, I don't think I would go into politics.

I don't think I'm intelligent to become an MP!