Labour pressed the Government on protecting women and girls, prosecuting rape and the current court backlog.
He accuses Tories of being ‘snowflake MPs waging war on free speech’; Sunak says he is indulging in “the usual political opportunism”.
The Prime Minister insists that there “is no one single lever that will solve this problem” as Starmer says traffickers are “laughing all the way to the bank”.
The Prime Minister also jibed Starmer for making a ‘rare trip out of North London’ to visit Davos recently, in a PMQs which covered windfall taxes, Brexit, and Matt Hancock.
No member of the ERG rose to do the Leader of the Opposition’s dirty work for him by plunging a dagger between the PM’s shoulder blades.
The situation in Northern Ireland and the war in Ukraine are the top issues as the Prime Minister takes questions from MPs.
The Ukrainian President transformed the atmosphere at Westminster, uniting past British heroes with the present heroes fighting to evict his country’s invaders.
Or has PMQs become, like those wrestling bouts shown on the telly, a bit of a put-up job?
The Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition traded blows over both Nadhim Zahawi’s tax affairs, and Rosie Duffield’s likening of being in Labour to being in “an abusive relationship”.
But Sunak too wished to show the world he is not as other men, and in particular that today’s controversies occurred when Johnson was PM.
The Prime Minister replied that he was sticking by his principles and waiting for the findings of the investigation.
Two children watching the exchanges from the gallery did not get bored, so in that respect the pantomime had been a success.
He says that the NHS doesn’t need “Labour’s only idea” – namely, another large-scale NHS reorganisation.
The PM demonstrated his capacity for counter-attack, and neither Starmer nor Flynn managed to disconcert him.
Kruger had to courage to propose that Britain leave the ECHR and draft a new framework for refugees and human rights.