Newly elected British Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn on Wednesday engaged with David Cameron for the first time, bringing a low-key style to the usually raucous weekly showdown of Prime Minister's Questions (PMQs).
The radical left-winger, whose refusal to sing "God Save the Queen" drew ire from the right-wing press, broke with convention and selected his six questions from the public having "crowd sourced" ideas online.
Questions from "Angela," "Steven," "Gail," "Marie," "Paul" and "Claire" dealt mainly with the provision of affordable housing and welfare cuts, hinting at the issues that will form the basis of his opposition.
The spectacle was far from the cut and thrust of previous Cameron grillings by Corbyn's predecessor Ed Miliband, and the cheers and jeers from opposing sides of the House of Commons were less audible than before.
Corbyn's subdued style even stood out in the way he was dressed - his brown jacket and dark trousers contrasting with the dark-blue suits preferred by many MPs including the prime minister himself.
"I want things to be rather different because I think the public as a whole have had enough of 'yah-boo sucks' politics, theatrical politics," the 66-year-old socialist said before the debate.
Cameron welcomed the call for a more orderly debate and was noticeably less blustery than before. "If we are able to change PMQs and make it a more genuine exercise ... no one would be more delighted than me," he said.
He even turned the tables on Labour MPs when they heckled one of his answers, saying "I thought this was the 'new question time.'"
All eyes were on the new Labour leader, a formerly obscure MP and pacifist campaigner, following his landslide victory on Saturday.
AFP
mme.gr
16/9/15
--
-
Related:
The radical left-winger, whose refusal to sing "God Save the Queen" drew ire from the right-wing press, broke with convention and selected his six questions from the public having "crowd sourced" ideas online.
Questions from "Angela," "Steven," "Gail," "Marie," "Paul" and "Claire" dealt mainly with the provision of affordable housing and welfare cuts, hinting at the issues that will form the basis of his opposition.
The spectacle was far from the cut and thrust of previous Cameron grillings by Corbyn's predecessor Ed Miliband, and the cheers and jeers from opposing sides of the House of Commons were less audible than before.
Corbyn's subdued style even stood out in the way he was dressed - his brown jacket and dark trousers contrasting with the dark-blue suits preferred by many MPs including the prime minister himself.
"I want things to be rather different because I think the public as a whole have had enough of 'yah-boo sucks' politics, theatrical politics," the 66-year-old socialist said before the debate.
Cameron welcomed the call for a more orderly debate and was noticeably less blustery than before. "If we are able to change PMQs and make it a more genuine exercise ... no one would be more delighted than me," he said.
He even turned the tables on Labour MPs when they heckled one of his answers, saying "I thought this was the 'new question time.'"
All eyes were on the new Labour leader, a formerly obscure MP and pacifist campaigner, following his landslide victory on Saturday.
AFP
mme.gr
16/9/15
--
-
Related:
Ο Κάμερον «θα επιδιώξει συναίνεση» για τη διεξαγωγή επιθέσεων ενάντια στο Ισλαμικό Κράτος στη Συρία
Corbyn is ‘national security threat’, says UK PM
British PM, new opposition leader spar politely in parliament’s ritual joust...
ReplyDeleteThe new leader of Britain’s opposition Labour Party, veteran leftist Jeremy Corbyn, confronted Prime Minister David Cameron in parliament for the first time on Sept. 16 and said the house’s raucous weekly question-and-answer session should be less theatrical and more about hearing ordinary people’s voices.
Kicking off with questions on unaffordable housing, mental health and welfare, Corbyn’s low-key performance did little to ruffle Cameron, who gave detailed answers in an unusually muted manner.
The session had been eagerly awaited, with some anticipating a fierce duel between Corbyn, a bearded stalwart of left-wing causes and an opponent of austerity, and the upper-class Conservative Cameron.
Known as “PMQs” - Prime Minister’s Questions - the weekly verbal jousts have become combative in the age of rolling 24-hour news, with witty put-downs that appeal to television often drowning out questions about government policy or direction.
Corbyn, elected Labour Party leader at the weekend, shrugged off a reference by Cameron to a World War Two remembrance service on Tuesday where he was criticised for not singing the national anthem. Instead, he launched into an attack on PMQs.
“Many told me that they thought...parliament was out of touch and too theatrical, and that they wanted things done differently,” Corbyn told a packed parliament, where some lawmakers were forced to stand on the stairs.
“And above all, they wanted their voice heard in parliament.”
In response to the prime minister saying he did not want Britain to become a place where people did not want to work, Corbyn said some needed welfare and that providing it was the “decent, civil thing” to do.
Labour lawmakers congratulated Corbyn, with some praising him for deflating his Conservative opponents, who often try to score points from the opposition with well-timed barbs.
Cameron was bolstered when he became leader of the Conservative Party in 2005 in his first exchange when he told the then prime minister, Tony Blair, that he had been “the future once”.
Reuters