From the BBC:
British PM David Cameron has returned to the surface after plunging nearly €300,000 (£250,000) down to the deepest place in politics, the Cash For Questions Trench in the west end of London.He made the solo descent in a submarine called "Deep Pocket Challenger", taking over two years to reach the bottom. His party treasurer spent more than half an hour exploring the possibility of a large donation, before a speedy sacking once news reached the surface.
Undercover journalists were kitted out with cameras and lights so they could film the depths to which politicians will stoop. This is the first manned expedition into the murky depths of graft since journalists from the same newspaper tried to trap the then leader of UKIP with similar leading questions and journalists from the BBC caught out three Labour politicians - which took place in 2010.
Before the dive, the Prime Minister told the BBC that making the descent was "the fulfilment of a dream".
He said: "I grew up on a steady diet of sleaze at a time when politicians were living a totally corrupt reality. Peerages were being sold and the entire EU Commission has to resign for corruption. And that's what I grew up with, what I valued from my childhood."
Monday, 26 March 2012
"Cameron sinks to new depths"
My latest blogpost: "Cameron sinks to new depths"Tweet this! Posted by Mark Wadsworth at 10:34
Labels: Corruption, David Cameron MP, Political Party Funding, Titanic
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1 comments:
hehe, nice mashup.
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