PMQ’s today bolstered my view that David Cameron will outperform Gordon Brown in the three TV debates. Cameron is simply more confident about thinking on his feet than Brown. When Ronnie Campbell and chums started suggesting that the generals who had criticised Brown’s record on defence were doing so because they were Tories, Cameron changed tack and demanded that the Prime Minister di...
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Spectator on 10th Mar 2010 (via spectator.co.uk)
A TV debate will offer Gordon Brown a chance to reassert himself against a dominant David Cameron says Benedict Brogan.
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Telegraph on 2nd Sep 2009 (via telegraph.co.uk)
David Cameron has promised to give MPs more chances to quiz him in greater detail about his policies if he becomes prime minister.
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PoliticsCoUk on 26th Jan 2009 (via politics.co.uk)
Have we just witnessed the Prime Minister's bubble bursting? The one certain thing going for David Cameron that helped him become leader of the Conservatives was his abili
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Scotsman on 7th Oct 2011 (via news.scotsman.com)
Over the past couple of weeks, David Cameron has been seizing the initiative in reacting to the MPs' expenses scandal and sounding more Prime Ministerial by the day. And it would seem that the idea of David Cameron wielding the...
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CentreRight on 26th May 2009 (via conservativehome.blogs.com)
David Cameron wrote to all Tory MPs to defend his record since becoming Prime Minister and insist that the coalition Government is still ''delivering for the Conservative Party''.
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Telegraph on 30th Jul 2010 (via telegraph.co.uk)
More than 12 million people watched David Cameron's arrival at No 10 Downing Street live on TV, figures show.
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Telegraph on 13th May 2010 (via telegraph.co.uk)
Today's report from the House of Lords communications committee contains some interesting recommendations about the lobby system, but, buried in the minutes of evidence, there's also a fascinating letter from the Conservative party. It says that, if David Cameron became prime minister, he would take part in an annual televised debate with the leader of the opposition. The home secretary,...
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Guardian on 26th Jan 2009 (via guardian.co.uk)
Asked if the Prime Minister had studied David Cameron s speech, the PMS said that the Prime Minister was on a visit to Nottingham, talking to businesses and local people and getting on with the business of Government. In terms of any reaction to David Cameron s speech, it was best to talk to the Labour Party; Yvette Cooper had put a statement out and Stephen Timms would be giving a political respo...
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DowningStreetSays on 17th Oct 2008 (via downingstreetsays.com)
David Cameron has accused the prime minister of being "in denial" about the government's economic record and piling up debt for future generations.
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ePolitix on 28th Jan 2009 (via rss.feedsportal.com)
Christopher Caldwell’s New York Times Magazine profile of David Cameron has finally been published; Caldwell first interviewed Cameron for it last year. I expect the Tories will see it as an important non-electoral milestone for them, a sign that the American establishment expects Cameron to be the next Prime Minister. The piece is, as you would expect with a Caldwell article, well written a...
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Spectator on 9th Jul 2009 (via spectator.co.uk)