I watched the ding-dong between him and Sophie Raworth and he held his end up arguing for his party's policies.
Meanwhile, back in the Tory camp, we have the mess of them not knowing where they are or what to do.
Hague says:
"What we have to do is make sure we follow up and communicate properly the things that we are succeeding in in government." In other words we have to tell the electorate that we are doing well.
However Bernard Jenkins offers this:
"This isn't a crisis for a government but a crisis of governance. We're living in a country where politicians talk about fixing things... but they seem powerless to deal with it.
There is a real sense that the whole of the Westminster village is living in its own world talking in its own terms and has lost touch.
A small professional managerial class is running British politics and they have very little to do with the ordinary lives of ordinary people up and down the country.
If we're going to avoid an Italian situation where comedians start getting elected then the whole British political establishment has got to be forced to engage much more actively with what ordinary people are feeling."
Preach at us or listen to us: Which is it?