The Prime Minister believes in Christian tolerance, but not of the Labour Leader.
The Chancellor crossed swords with Angela Eagle – who seemed to please Labour MPs rather more than their leader does.
In this pantomime battle between Corbyn’s understudy and Cameron’s, the latter was made to look like an ugly sister.
“Why doesn’t the Prime Minister accept that his ability to command his Cabinet has simply disappeared?”
“One of the ways to defeat terrorism is to show them that we will not be cowed.”
The horrors of Paris have exposed Corbyn’s inability to speak even for his own MPs, one of whom today showed him up by scoring off Cameron.
“If he’s trying to move the Labour Party to the Left, I’d give him full Marx!”
There is about the Labour leader a kind of effortless inferiority. He may be under the impression that he is doing rather well.
Corbyn waited in vain for silence, his demeanour that of a geography teacher who wonders what the world is coming to when it won’t listen to him.
The Prime Minister pointed to the Living Wage and tax cuts as softening the blow.
Jacob of North-East Somerset pointed to the alarming possibility that the Prime Minister may soon have a pretext for creating hundreds of new peers.
Plus: I hate Frankfurt. Love for Javid. Morgan’s popularity rises. And: No-one wants to see Danny Alexander’s ginger nuts swinging their way down Whitehall.
Cameron: “Since I became Prime Minister there are 480,000 fewer children in houses where nobody works.”
David Cameron’s hooliganism, which extends to stealing Labour policies in broad daylight, cannot long be shamed into silence by the new Leader of the Opposition.
The third clip of the Prime Minister’s best PMQs replies.