David Cameron Involved in a freaky Story
The book “Call Me Dave” also claims that Cameron smoked marijuana at university. The lawmaker claimed that the ceremony involved a dead pig and that Mr Cameron “inserted a private part of his anatomy into the animal’s mouth”. The club was known for its excessive parties.
Political journalist Isabel Oakeshott, Lord Ashcroft’s co-author, has defended the pig allegations.
She added that the author “has set out his reasons for writing it”, suggesting the Prime Minister views the book as an act of revenge for his refusal to offer Lord Ashcroft a top job when he entered Downing Street in 2010.
David Cameron has been condemned for his “incompetent” response to turmoil in Libya and Syria – with one ex-forces chief accusing him of relying on his experience in the “Combined Cadet Force at Eton”.
Apologies in advance if you never look at the cutesy little candies the same way again.
Baron Richards, who was chief of the defence staff until 2013, complained about the Prime Minister’s “knee-jerk support for the underdog”, according to the latest claims from a biography.
But the 69-year-old, who has ploughed around £8 million into the party, has a rift with Mr Cameron going back to 2010 when the peer admitted he was then not paying United Kingdom tax on earnings outside Britain. “On any of it”, a Cameron spokesperson tells the Independent.
Reactions on social media focused on the description of a freaky initiation ritual for an Oxford University club made by an unnamed contemporary of Cameron’s who is himself a member of parliament.
Jonathan Ashworth MP, Labour’s shadow minister without portfolio, said: “Lord Ashcroft stated today that he made the prime minister fully aware of his non-domiciled status in 2009”.
The alleged initiation rite took place at Oxford University at a meeting of the Piers Gaveston Society, which is notorious for its debauchery, the book quoted sources as saying.
He claims that Mr Cameron was part of a “dope smoking group” with friends while he studied at Oxford.
Speaking to the biographers, one Tory MP said he had been asked to join the Bullingdon club but walked out of the first event in disgust and considered it was all about “despising poor people”.
SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon said Mr Cameron had to answer questions about his knowledge of Lord Ashcroft’s non dom status.