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23 May 2012updated 07 Sep 2021 12:21pm

Temper, temper, Mr. Cameron

By New Statesman

David Cameron’s temper is becoming legendary, with Ed Miliband making concerted efforts to rile him in Prime Minister’s Questions. Last week he said that he hoped Cameron would be getting anger management lessons before his appearance at the Leveson inquiry. Today Cameron lost his temper again. Here are some of Cameron’s angriest – and rudest – moments:

The muttering idiot. Ed Balls takes great delight in teasing Cameron at PMQs, and hit his target today, being called the ‘muttering idiot opposite’ by Cameron. The speaker asked for the remark to be withdrawn.

“Calm down dear” Cameron alienates feminists everywhere by telling Angela Eagle MP to “calm down dear, calm down calm down” when he mistakenly said Dr Howard Stoate had lost his seat in the previous election. He stood down.

Dennis Skinner, 80, was told by the Prime Minister “Well, the honourable gentleman has the right, at any time, to take his pension and I advise him to do so,” after the MP accused Cameron of letting Jeremy Hunt take the blame for his inappropriate relationships with News International. So that’s the geriatric vote.

It’s fair to say the House of Commons sometimes has the atmosphere of the school room. Never more so than David Cameron’s snapping at the two Eds as he heard them talking during his speech. He said “I wish the Shadow Chancellor would occasionally shut up and listen to the answer.” and labelled Balls “the most annoying person in modern politics”.

Cameron hit the feminists again, patronising Nadine Dorries, when he said “I know you’re very frustrated”, over the abortion debate, then tried to restrain his giggles.

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