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DAVID Cameron was accused of a whitewash yesterday after publishing a dodgy dossier of the Coalition’s “achievements”.

The 119-page document failed to mention the Government had broken 70 promises, including missing economic targets and driving the country into a double-dip recession.

It was released days after the Prime Minister said the Coalition was a “Ronseal deal. It does what it says on the tin”.

But despite his claims that the audit would be “full, frank and unvarnished”, it glossed over 7000 fewer NHS nurses and made no mention of millionaires’ tax cuts.

Labour MP Michael Dugher said the document was a “cover-up”.

He went on: “Far from being the unvarnished truth, all we have seen is a whitewash.

“There’s nothing about the true state of the economy, the double-dip recession or that borrowing is up 10 per cent.”

Glaring omissions included no mention that the Government missed their target to balance the books within five years.

Instead, the audit claimed the independent Office for Budget Responsibility had confirmed the Government were “on course to meet our fiscal mandate”.

The dossier also refused to admit the Government broke the promise in the Coalition ­agreement that there would be “no top-down reorganisations of the NHS”.

And there was also no mention of the U-turns on the pie tax, forest sell-offs and the joint fight striker.

They also failed to admit the number of Government advisers had risen despite a pledge to reduce it.

The audit also said ­ministers were “committed to fair pricing for rail travel” without mentioning fares had risen above inflation in January this year.

Labour leader Ed Miliband said Cameron was a “PR man who can’t even do a relaunch”.

The audit contained a list of the 399 pledges in the Coalition agreement, drawn up by the Tories and Lib Dems after the election, followed by a note on the progress so far.

Other broken promises included creating an elected House of Lords, increasing renewable energy targets, a vote on the hunt ban and setting up a single financial crime agency.

The report was reportedly held back to coincide with the ­mid-term Coalition relaunch.

Its existence only emerged when an aide was seen with a note weighing up the advantages and disadvantages of releasing it.

Downing Street said ­publication was delayed so it could be “copper bottomed” for accuracy.