For the Record
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Narrated by:
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David Cameron
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By:
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David Cameron
About this listen
The referendum on Britain’s membership of the EU is one of the most controversial political events of our times. For the first time, the man who called that vote talks about the decision and its origins, as well as giving a candid account of his time at the top of British politics.
David Cameron was Conservative Party leader during the largest financial crash in living memory. The Arab Spring and the Eurozone crisis both started during his first year as prime minister. The backdrop to his time in office included the advent of ISIS, surging migration and a rapidly changing EU.
Here he talks about how he confronted those challenges, from modernising a party that had suffered three successive electoral defeats to forming the first coalition government for seventy years. He sets out how he helped turn around Britain’s economy, implementing a modern, compassionate agenda that included education and welfare reform, the legalisation of gay marriage, the referendum on Scottish independence and world-leading environmental policies.
David Cameron is searingly honest about the key players from his time in politics. And he is frank about himself – the things he got right and the things he got wrong. He opens up about family life too, including the tragic loss of his eldest son.
We learn why he kept Britain’s promise on overseas aid spending and what it was like to commit British troops to conflicts in Libya, Iraq and Syria. He sets out how he won the first outright Conservative majority in nearly a quarter of a century, and describes the events leading up to the EU referendum, the renegotiation, the campaign – and his thoughts on it all today.
It is the most compelling record yet of what it’s like to lead in modern times and to live behind the most famous door in the world.
©2019 David Cameron (P)2019 HarperCollins Publishers LimitedCritic reviews
"The political memoir of the decade." (Sunday Times)
"I praise For the Record with genuine enthusiasm. It is tastily candid about his colleagues...but also about his own mistakes." (Andrew Billen, Times)
"Arresting...Cameron has always been an easy target. But on reading this book, I think it is impossible for any fair-minded observer to doubt that he was a fundamentally decent, well-intentioned man, who did his best to represent Britain on the world stage and left our nation’s economy in a much better state than he found it." (Daily Mail)
I give credit to Cameron for maintaining foreign aid and gay marriage. But he will be remembered for stifling Britain's economic recovery and leading Britain out of the EU. For these disastrous decisions, he deserves very harsh criticism. And in 2019 these massive failures are evident everywhere I go in Britain. Homeless people filling our streets, cuts in schools hurting those who need it most.,the NHS struggling to keep going. All this not being dealt with because of the national obsession with Brexit.
Cameron did his best, but his massively privileged background. Boarding school, Eton, Oxford, Conservative HQ, MP and then PM, all meant he was never close to living a normal life. He therefore failed to understand the disastrous effects that austerity would reap on Britain. He barely mentions food banks, the social care crisis and Britain's obesity time bomb, in the book. All made far worse by his government.
Britain will be paying the price of his government's failures for decades to come.
Honest account of how Britain was pushed 2disaster
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More interesting for me though was David Cameron’s honesty. I lost count of how often he admitted to getting something wrong, not something that you hear from many politicians, ever. How refreshing because it made the biography seem more believable rather than the spin that I’d expected.
He recounted moments that were heartbreaking, ranging from the personal to acts of utter inhumanity, balanced with lovely snapshots of family life; Sam, his wife, is a trooper.
I’d recommend this book regardless of your political leanings as the behind the scenes shenanigans of our political system makes me ask: who would want to be Prime Minister, especially now in our post-truth age?
A surprisingly good listen
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they had so much but it was no good to them. heart breaking chapterd
wow. a great example of how things can go so wrong
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The account of losing his young son was particularly heartwarming.
As you might expect he spends considerable time explaining (and defending) his various policies. The book also gives an interesting and sometimes surprising account of his relationships with other world leaders and more than a fair share covering his relationship with Boris.
I would suggest a good book for anyone with an interest in politics, left, right or central.
Engaging account of Cameron’s Premiership
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Fantastic listen
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