David Cameron purring comments have now mortified him. In fact, according to him, he will be giving his apologies once again to the Queen after he told the former New York Mayor, Michael Bloomberg, that the Queen "purred down the line" when he told her that Scotland had voted against independence.
The Prime Minister said at the "Andrew Marr Show" on BBC1 that he felt "extremely sorry and very embarrassed" after he confirmed an open secret. Apparently, he was not supposed to tell anyone that the Queen had wanted Scotland to remain in the United Kingdom.
The Queen had never imposed her views on her adoring public. Instead, she only urged the voters in Scotland to think "very carefully" before officially casting their votes in the referendum. Although she had her own opinion on the matter, the Queen followed convention and declined to declare which side she was taking in public.
The Prime Minister, on the other hand, might not have gotten the memo. He highlighted her private thinking as he recounted to Bloomberg the conversation that he had with the Queen a couple of hours after the final voting results were announced.
David Cameron purring stated about the exchange that he had with Bloomberg, "One of those moments when you look back and kick yourself very hard. It was not a conversation I should have had, even though it was a private conversation. I am extremely sorry and very embarrassed about it. I have made my apologies and I think I will probably be making some more. I am very sorry about it."
David Cameron purring comments went exactly like this, "The definition of relief is being the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and ringing the Queen and saying, 'It's all right. It's okay.' That was something. She purred down the line."
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