Thu Jan 24, 2013, 08:39 AM
pampango (14,053 posts)
U.K. Prime Minister Defends Decision to Seek E.U. Vote - "reform EU, not to retreat into isolation".
Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain on Thursday defended his decision to seek a referendum on his country’s membership in the European Union, saying his goal was to reform the 27-nation bloc, not to retreat into isolation.
“This is not about turning our backs on Europe, quite the opposite,” Mr. Cameron told an audience at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, ““It’s about how we make the case for a more competitive, open and flexible Europe, and secure the U.K.’s place within it.” On Wednesday, Mr. Cameron pledged to hold a referendum on Britain’s European Union membership within five years, assuming his Conservative Party is re-elected in the next national election scheduled for 2015. The proposal met with deep skepticism elsewhere in the European Union, but Mr. Cameron’s party — which has long struggled over the question of Europe — welcomed it. Mr. Cameron once again laid down Britain’s line in the sand on European integration, saying: “If you mean Europe has to become a political union, if there should be a country called Europe, I don’t agree.” http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/25/world/europe/cameron-defends-decision-to-seek-eu-vote.html I think Cameron really wants the UK to stay in the EU, just a 'reformed' EU with perhaps special rules for the UK. OTOH, many of his fellow Conservatives (not to mention members of UKIP) want the UK out of the EU once and for all and look at the referendum as a way to accomplish that. Time will tell whether this referendum gambit results in a 'reformed' EU or a more integrated EU without the UK.
|
2 replies, 215 views
Always highlight: 10 newest replies | Replies posted after I mark a forum
Replies to this discussion thread
| Author | Time | Post | |
| pampango | Jan 2013 | OP | |
| tama | Jan 2013 | #1 | |
| pampango | Jan 2013 | #2 |
Response to pampango (Original post)
Thu Jan 24, 2013, 08:54 AM
tama (9,137 posts)
1. 2017
|
Last edited Thu Jan 24, 2013, 08:55 AM USA/ET - Edit history (1) Lot can and will happen in four years. Main point is domestic, not to lose too many votes to UKIP in next elections. Which is the attention span of political parties.
|
Response to pampango (Original post)
Thu Jan 24, 2013, 09:31 AM
pampango (14,053 posts)
2. Reaction to Cameron from Euclid Tsakalotos, Greek left-wing Syriza MP
Since 2008, inside and outside the eurozone, opposition to austerity policies has been labelled populist, in a cynical exercise to conflate the popular with populism. But it is successive British leaders who have raised populism with respect to the EU to a fine art. The dream of a Europe as a vast "free" market with limited social rights, or "a more flexible, adaptable and open European Union", has been the goal. Hollowing out democracy has been the means. There are also reactions from conservatives in Germany, Finland and the Czech Republic; a French socialist; a Dutch correspondent and a Spanish social scientist. From the French socialist MEP (Pervenche Beres): Mr Cameron seems to forget that the EU is a union of freedom and a free market, not a union of markets or an open relationship. |

