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The Cameron government's dangerous liaisons with HSBC are not yet entirely an affair of state, but they already provide the material for an epic political battle three months of parliamentary elections, which made headlines and resulted, Wednesday 11 February, a parliamentary clash of extraordinary verbal abuse.
"There is something rotten in the heart of the Conservative Party, and that's it! "Yelled very Shakespearean, the leader of the Labour opposition, Ed Miliband, pointing Tory Prime Minister David Cameron amid the hubbub. You are a "Premier doubtful" ("dodgy prime minister" in the text), "surrounded by questionable donors," he has said, lighting a firecracker again: the former treasurer of the Conservatives, Lord Stanley Fink, figure as six other main contributors to the Conservative Party in the list of beneficiaries of tax schemes of HSBC-Switzerland. Green apple color benches House of Commons had not vibrated at that point long ago.
For the opposition, the scandal is no doubt that the Conservative Party has shown a guilty indulgence towards tax evasion, and the government of Mr Cameron has shown little willingness to prosecute fraudsters the list had been forwarded by France to the britanniqu administration ...