GEMMA COLLINS posed with an unlikely fan at Cheltenham Festival this week – former Prime Minister David Cameron.

Now we can reveal he asked the Queen of Essex for a picture in the Royal Box on Thursday.

NINTCHDBPICT001066609865Gemma Collins was asked for a picture by David CameronCredit: Instagram Gemma Collins holds up cash after winning at Cheltenham.The GC flashed her wads of cash after winning at CheltenhamCredit: Instagram

A source told The Sun: “ was honoured that asked her for a picture.

“They chatted about politics and her fondness of conservative leader .”

Former Towie star Gemma shared the snap to her 2.2million Instagram followers alongside David and his wife .

She wrote: “It was lovely to be in the Royal Box and have a good chat with and his lovely wife – we spoke politics and what we were going to bet on next.”

– and £5,000 off just one bet.

Our exclusive video showed the GC was spotted in The Paddison box shouting “I’m loaded” as she basked in her glory alongside stars including and .

She kept showing her wads of cash to as she celebrated with friends.

Gemma shouted: “I’m coming home with 20 large ones.”

Gemma Collins in a helicopter with a glass of champagne, heading to Cheltenham Festival.Gemma flew to Cheltenham Festival by helicopterCredit: Instagram Gemma Collins raising a glass of champagne at the 2026 Cheltenham Festival.She celebrated her win with champagneCredit: Splash

Last week swapped furlongs for fashion as the bookmaker crashed Paris Fashion Week to unveil The PP Collection – a bold and eye-catching range of tracksuits styled on the most famous silks in horse racing.

Modelling the line were racing icons , Matt Chapman and Mick Fitzgerald to celebrate the unmistakable colours worn by jockeys for generations.

Influencing the collection, Paddy Power teamed up with leading jump jockey Harry Cobden to reinterpret four sets of iconic silks as modern streetwear, blending horse racing heritage with high-fashion attitude.

Harry said: “Racing silks are some of the most recognisable designs in sport. They’re bold, colourful and each one tells a story about the owners, the horses and the history behind them.

“Racing is changing with so much fresh energy and style, so why not bring that into culture where silks can take to the streets and set new trends.”