MPs are
turning public anger about multinational tax - dodging on HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC), by pointing the finger at the taxman's failure to do more against Google's «highly contrived» tax arrangements.
Not exact matches
Podemos makes no secret of its foundation upon
public anger either, it aims to «
turn outrage into political change», as the party manifesto states.
While managing to keep it together in
public, the mayor is privately liable to let loose at staff: A 2008 Times article claims that as his previous term was expiring, the frustrated mayor could
turn «suddenly red faced» with
anger and openly berate staff over slight mishaps.
By that time, the
anger over the expenses scandal had
turned partly to boredom, the
public becoming desensitised to the crookedness and low level criminality of their legislators.
According to Daniel Diermeier, dean of the Harris School of
Public Policy Studies at the University of Chicago and author of Reputation Rules, «moral outrage is accompanied by powerful emotions like
anger, disgust and contempt, which in
turn may trigger desires for revenge or dissociation.»