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Anti-EU complicate Cameron's referendum

Published: 14 Jun 2015 - 11:45 am | Last Updated: 13 Jan 2022 - 10:51 am

 

British Prime Minister David Cameron



London---The diehard eurosceptics whom British Prime Minister David Cameron tried to appease by promising a referendum on leaving the EU look set to cause him a series of headaches now the vote is on.
Cameron is in talks with fellow leaders to secure concessions on Britain's relationship with the European Union before a referendum due by the end of 2017, but increasingly expected in 2016.
While those negotiations will be challenging as countries like Poland resist plans to limit migrants' access to state benefits, the struggle Cameron faces at home to keep his centre-right Conservatives in line could be just as tricky.
The 48-year-old, who wants to stay in the EU subject to reforms, is not the first Conservative prime minister to face trouble from eurosceptics.
In 1993, John Major labelled three of his cabinet ministers "bastards" over their opposition to the Maastricht treaty, which created the EU.
But with the government holding a majority in the House of Commons of just 12 seats, a group of anti-EU rebels could cause serious problems for Cameron by blocking legislation if they do not approve of the reform package he brings back from Brussels.
"They can and will cause him real difficulties, especially if they start trying to impose conditions on what reform comes through," Simon Usherwood, senior lecturer at the University of Surrey and a euroscepticism expert, told AFP.
- For Thatcher and two world wars -
It is thought around 50 of the 330 Conservative lawmakers in the Commons are likely to want to leave the EU whatever concessions Cameron can extract from other leaders.
Many more have eurosceptic inclinations but will wait and see what the renegotiation delivers before deciding whether to campaign to leave.
Over 90 MPs have joined a newly-formed group called Conservatives for Britain, formed to debate how to respond to the eventual reform package -- and if necessary, prepare for an "out" campaign.
David Campbell Bannerman, the group's co-chairman and a Conservative member of the European Parliament, told AFP it wanted a "fundamental renegotiation" of relations with the EU.
"We're not the nascent 'out' campaign, we do want to support the prime minister in renegotiation," he said.
But he added: "If renegotiation is not satisfactory in the minds of members, we're prepared to prepare for a campaign on the outside."
Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond, himself a eurosceptic, has already ruled out Westminster having a unilateral veto over EU laws.
At Tuesday's first Commons debate on the EU Referendum Bill, the passion Europe provokes among Conservatives -- dogged by splits on the issue since Britain joined the European Economic Community in 1973 -- was laid bare.

AFP