HEATHROW villagers who feel they have been "kicked into the long grass" over new Heathrow expansion plans had a protest football game outside the House of Commons.

The group travelled to Westminster this morning (Friday), with Channel 5 TV cameras in tow, to set up their jumpers for goalposts on the green overlooked by Parliament, and take a stand against the government's changing stance on a third runway.

The team wore England shirts, with past quotes from senior politicians affirming cross-party opposition to a third runway emblazoned on their backs.

Amongst them is David Cameron's now-infamous pledge in 2009 that a third runway would not go ahead, "no ifs, no buts."

Two Heathrow expansion options - a third runway to the north west of the existing airport, over Harmondsworth and Longford, and the extension of the northern runway to the west - are being considered by the Airports Commission, set up by the government to assess and recommend the best way to increase hub airport capacity in the south east.

The Commission is due to advise on their preferred option next summer, after the general election.

A second runway at Gatwick is a third option on the table.

The protest was organised by Harmondsworth resident Neil Keveren, who said: "We brought with us people from all the villages that would be affected. We will practice our kicking into the long grass, and our u-turns.

"The Conservative Government made promises that there would be no third runway before they were elected, and now it looks like they are going back on their word.

"If we can't believe them on this issue, how can we believe them about anything? We have been ignored for too long, and we just want to exercise our free speech and let our political leaders know that they should stand by their word.

"Sipson has been reprieved this time, but Harmondsworth and Longford would be destroyed."