Cameron Wants An Election Debate Broadcast... Online

Cameron Sidesteps Broadcasters With Offer To Take Part In Online Debate
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The election debate could be back on... online. That's the latest "compromise" offered by David Cameron, and a clear slight at the broadcasters that have threatened to empty chair the prime minister for not agreeing to their preferred debate format.

Earlier this month, the PM welched on the proposed TV debates ahead of the May 7th vote, including a final head-to-head confrontation with Labour leader Ed Miliband. The broadcasters reacted by moving ahead with the debates, which could be broadcast without Cameron's participation.

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David Cameron during an interview with Jim Waterson of Buzzfeed UK, as part of BuzzFeed Brews, at Millbank tower, central London

Speaking to in an online interview with BuzzFeed on Monday, Cameron indicated that he would be prepared to take part in a "multi-party" debate next week hosted by the website if they could get the other party leaders to agree to appear. He suggested that he was also sympathetic to a proposal put forward by the Daily Telegraph, the Guardian and Google - which owns the YouTube website - for an online debate involving the six main UK party leaders.

"I'm up for a debate, I'm up for a multi-party debate, whether it is you, whether it is another digital debate, whether it is the TV broadcasters, that matters less to me than having a multi-party debate before the campaign gets under way," he said. "Everyone's got to agree to it but I've said very clearly - multi-party debate before the campaign, where do I sign?"

David Cameron's Top Apologies
He was sorry about expenses(01 of10)
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David Cameron said the Tories were "sorry" in 2009 after a deluge of stories about MPs abusing expenses, adding: "The system we had and used was wrong".
He was sorry for seeming "one of the lads"(02 of10)
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Cameron said in 2011 that he had "screwed up" and was "not one of the lads" after telling Labour MP Angela Eagle to "calm down, dear" and dubbing Tory MP Nadine Dorries "extremely frustrated".
He was sorry for what the Tories thought about Mandela (03 of10)
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Cameron admitted in 2006 that Margaret Thatcher and the Tories had been wrong to brand Nelson Mandela's African National Congress (ANC) "terrorists" during their struggle against apartheid.He said: "The mistakes my party made in the past with respect to relations with the ANC and sanctions on South Africa make it all the more important to listen now."
And sorry about what they thought about Section 28(04 of10)
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Cameron apologised in 2009 for the Tories bringing in section 28, the controversial item of legislation which banned the "promotion' of homosexuality in schools, saying: "Yes, we may have sometimes been slow and, yes, we may have made mistakes, including Section 28, but the change has happened".
He was sorry for ruining your holiday(05 of10)
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Cameron said sorry this month for the passport shambles that meant Britons' passports were delayed, with a spokesman saying: ‘If people have been inconvenienced, of course the Government is sorry for that."
He was "very sorry" about the floods(06 of10)
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Cameron said he was "very sorry about any way people have suffered" during the floods as he led the government's response to the events in February.
He was sorry for cutting child benefit (07 of10)
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Cameron said he was "sorry" soon after getting elected for breaking an election promise by withdrawing child benefit from 1.2 million higher-rate taxpayers.
He was sorry about his dodgy cycling(08 of10)
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Cameron said he was "sorry" for making "mistakes" in 2008 after being snapped ignoring red lights and cycling the wrong way up a one-way street.
He was sorry for being wrong about WWII(09 of10)
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Cameron admitted he was "absolutely wrong" after being taken to task by an angry member of the public late in 2010 after saying Britain was the US' 'junior partner' against the Nazis in 1940.
And he was sorry for saying a naughty word (10 of10)
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Cameron apologised in 2009 after using the word "twat" during a breakfast radio show interview, after saying: "The trouble with Twitter, the instantness of it – too many twits might make a twat."He explained: "You always have to be careful what you say. If I've caused any offence I obviously regret that."