UK PM Rishi Sunak lands in fresh controversy, gets slammed for 'excruciating’ conversation with homeless man

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated: Dec 26, 2022, 03:52 PM IST

Social media users reacted to the exchange, with Labour Deputy Leader Angela Rayner tweeting that it was "excruciating" in reference to the ITV clip.

The UK Opposition Labour Party on Saturday slammed British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak over a television clip showing an awkward exchange with a man while volunteering at a soup kitchen for the poor and homeless at Christmas.

The British Indian leader was caught on camera during a visit to a shelter run by the charity Passage in London on Friday during which he asked a man if he worked in business. The man's reply caught on ITV News. “No, I'm homeless. I'm actually a homeless person.”

The man named Dean then said he was interested in business, prompting Sunak to ask him what kind of business, to which he replied finance.

(Also Read: Who is Reham Khan, Imran Khan's ex-wife who gets married for the third time?)

Sunak, who was volunteering with charity workers serving the food at the shelter, then said: “I used to work in finance, actually. Is that something you'd like to get into?” “Yeah, I wouldn't mind. But, I don't know, I'd like to get through Christmas first”  the homeless man responded.

The exchange prompted reactions on social media, with Labour Deputy Leader Angela Rayner tweeting ‘excruciating’ with reference to the ITV clip.

“Watching this I am concerned that the Prime Minister thinks homeless means don’t have a country pile (second home) at the moment,” said Labour MP Stella Creasy.

.

Another Labour MP, Bill Esterson, said the exchange demonstrated the Prime Minister was ‘out of touch’ at a time when the country faced a cost of living crisis.

On the pre-Christmas visit, Sunak praised the ‘fantastic work’ being done to support people over the festive period.

He told reporters, “Most of us this weekend, this Christmas, will be inside, will be warm, will be safe, will be with our families. But sadly that's not true for everybody.”

And that's why the government's investing a significant amount to reduce the number of people who are sleeping rough or are homeless, he added.