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David Cameron's Yorkshire 'hate' joke caught on mic | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Prime Minister David Cameron has been heard saying Yorkshire people "hate each other", while rehearsing a speech. | Prime Minister David Cameron has been heard saying Yorkshire people "hate each other", while rehearsing a speech. |
Wearing a microphone but not on camera, he was thought to be rehearsing an answer to a question on devolution and the number of bids from the county. | |
Ahead of a speech in Leeds, he said: "We just thought people in Yorkshire hated everyone else, we didn't realise they hated each other so much." | Ahead of a speech in Leeds, he said: "We just thought people in Yorkshire hated everyone else, we didn't realise they hated each other so much." |
Later, Mr Cameron told the BBC's Test Match Special it was "a total joke". | |
'Absolved' | |
The prime minister was in Leeds making a speech on the economy. | |
He was heard speaking to an unidentified male off-stage about the region's devolution proposals. | He was heard speaking to an unidentified male off-stage about the region's devolution proposals. |
Mr Cameron was wearing a television microphone when he made the comments but was not aware he was being recorded. | |
Later he went to Headingley to watch the one-day international between England and Australia. | |
He told Test Match Special his comments stemmed from the high number of devolution bids entered from across the region. | |
"I said to an aide that I thought Yorkshiremen had it in for other people rather than each other, clearly as a joke," he said. | |
Mr Cameron sat with two Yorkshire cricketing legends to watch the match. | |
The prime minister said: "I've been absolved by two of the greatest living Yorkshiremen; Geoffrey [Boycott] and Dickie Bird both agreed it was a joke." | |
'Some truth' | |
West Yorkshire Combined Authority leader, Peter Box, who is involved in the devolution bid from the Leeds City Region, said the prime minister's comments were "amusing". | |
He added: "There's some truth in it. | |
"We're quite tribal, we're competitive within Yorkshire, let alone with the rest of the country." | |
Councillor Judith Blake, Labour leader of Leeds City Council, criticised the prime minister and described Yorkshire people as "the friendliest in the world". | |
"If Mr Cameron visited Leeds more often, rather than for the occasional political stunt, he'd soon get to know that," she added. | "If Mr Cameron visited Leeds more often, rather than for the occasional political stunt, he'd soon get to know that," she added. |