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Bethan McKernan
Jun 19, 2016

Screenshot: BBC Question Time
David Cameron faced a Question Time audience in Milton Keynes on Sunday that was taking no prisoners.
It was the prime minister's final televised appearance for the Remain campaign before the country goes to the polls in the EU referendum on Thursday.
While the studio was supposed to be made up of equal parts Remain, Leave and undecided voters, the line of questioning veered on the brutal side.
The PM was at various points accused of lying about immigration targets...
Why in your manifesto did you say you would bring the number of EU immigrants down to the thousands when you knew very well you couldn't control those numbers?
Criticised for not giving a real answer on whether he'd veto Turkey joining the EU...
Told off for relying on too many experts...
People have become so disillusioned with the Establishment they’ve stopped listening to the experts.
...for running a 'scaremongering' campaign
You've compared the campaign to ISIS!
Called on to resign several times...
...and dubbed the "21st century Neville Chamberlain".
Are you really the 21st century Neville Chamberlain, waving a piece of paper in the air saying to the public 'This is what I have, I have this promise’, when a dictatorship in Europe could overrule it?
Simple question, yes or no please!
Phew. That's quite the 45 minutes.
Meanwhile, outside the studio, many non-Tory voters in the Remain camp found themselves confused by the fact they were rooting for Cameron in the Q&A session.
Three days to go, guys. Just three more days to go.
More: A brutally honest reason to vote Remain has been found on the streets of Cardiff
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