British Prime Minister David Cameron speaks during a high-level meeting on post-2015 anti-poverty goals at the Ford Foundation in New York September 24, 2014. [Photo/Agencies] |
LONDON - British Prime Minister David Cameron is to apologize in person to Queen Elizabeth after he was overheard saying she had "purred" with happiness on hearing that Scots had voted to reject independence, Sky News said on Thursday.
EU expresses joy at Scotland's 'No'
Scottish voters have rejected independence |
Cameron's comments, made to Michael Bloomberg, the former New York mayor, were picked up by a TV crew on Tuesday during his visit to the city to attend the United Nations General Assembly.
"She purred down the line. I've never heard someone so happy," Cameron, whose Conservative Party campaigned for Scotland to stay in the United Kingdom, said of the Queen.
The Queen herself, who never makes her own political views public, had stayed out of expressing an opinion on the independence debate and merely said she hoped the country could come together after last week's vote.
Media reported that Cameron would apologize to the queen in person when he sees the monarch at their next regular meeting.
"Look, I'm very embarrassed by this. I'm extremely sorry about it," he told reporters in New York according to Sky.
"It was a private conversation, but clearly a private conversation that I shouldn't have had and won't have again. My office has already been in touch with the Palace to make that clear and I will do so as well."