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David Cameron - forUK politician - the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and Leader of the Conservative Party. The Cameron Ministry is the first coalition government in the UK since the II World War.
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Even for a Johnson, Jo is terrifyingly clever How Samantha Cameron might have commented on the arrival of Jo Johnson as Downing Street's new policy chiefWell even for a Johnson, Jo is SO terrifyingly clever? I mean Dave is right, even if he had never been on How to Spend It, everyone says he was the most brilliant spa correspondent EVER, Jo would defo be the most talented person for the job eg last week I was in this like, major dilemma, I was like Jo, please I desperately need your advice, is it going to be totally no tights from now on & be completely honest are my legs too pale? So he frowned really hard, it was like the amaze Michelangelo statue I swear you could FEEL him thinking, then he was like, hmmm, though the weather might appear propitious it is not risk-free thus all indicators suggest what economists call "an emergency pair", concealed within a traditional "handbag", but ratings might be enhanced if you were to "rock" some appropriate hosiery for the Queen's speech, Wolford's Luxe 9 have a record of performing well r |
If David Cameron had any sense, he would call a referendum on Europe now | Simon Jenkins With Ukip and now Nigel Lawson roaming free, he'll only regain the initiative on Europe if he calls Nick Clegg's bluffThe UK Independence party is mid-term political froth, here today and blown away tomorrow. The only matter of interest is whether it froths enough to destroy a major party leader, David Cameron, as the SDP did Michael Foot in 1983. But if Ukip is froth, yesterday's intervention by Nigel Lawson is a different matter. The former chancellor may be years out of office, but he is still a leading Tory. He has turned the knife in his leader's side just when Cameron might have thought things could not get worse. Lawson's demand that Britain leave the European Union was more substantive for coming from a former EU supporter and a sometime shadower of a common currency.Cameron now has one trouble no Tory leader can ignore: Euro-trouble. He might manage a possible Commons vote on a referendum motion. He might even manage an EU renegotiation, notionally after the next election |
Cameron defends EU plans after Nigel Lawson calls for UK to leave • Ex-chancellor's remarks 'give cover to Eurosceptic right'• Cameron critics dismiss chances of UK-EU deal as 'moonshine'• Lib Dems dismiss credibility of 'climate-change denier' LawsonDavid Cameron has been forced to defend his plans to renegotiate the terms of Britain's EU membership after the former Tory chancellor Lord Lawson said Britain should leave because the prime minister will only secure "piffling changes".As Conservative MPs hailed Lawson for creating a "game-changing" moment, the prime minister rejected Lawson's intervention and insisted he would be able to secure real changes in Britain's membership terms."I want to give people a choice not between the status quo and leaving the European Union," the prime minister said at a conference on Somalia in London."I want to give people a proper choice between Britain remaining in a reformed EU or leaving that EU. That's the choice that people will have. That is the choice that people want. And there is only one way to get i |
Queen's speech: a fresh start that won't upset the backbenchers | Analysis The political year ahead will not be shaped on Wednesday – but there are at least two landmark reformsEach year, the Queen's speech, often delivered in the wake of a local election drubbing for the governing party, is presented as the moment of a political fightback. It is the start of a new political year, and the government's instinct is to claim this as a turning point. Downing Street's aim is to impose coherence on what is necessarily an arbitrary collection of bills that have fought their way to the front of the legislative queue.But two things are notable about Wednesday's Queen's speech. Cameron has jettisoned anything that might worsen his relationship with his backbenchers – plain cigarette packaging, a draconian "snooper's charter", a recall bill setting out the circumstances in which the electorate can demand miscreant MPs be recalled, and guarantees on overseas aid spending. Secondly, the next year in Westminster, with the exception of one bill on immigration, will not |
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