Newly re-elected British Prime Minister David Cameron was to have his first talks with other EU leaders yesterday on reforms he is seeking to the EU before holding a referendum by 2017 on Britain’s membership in the bloc.
Cameron was to use a summit in the Latvian capital between the EU and six former Soviet republics as an opportunity to sound out other EU leaders on his demands for changes that could influence whether Britain remains part of the union.
“Today, I will start discussions in earnest with fellow leaders on reforming the EU and renegotiating the UK’s relationship with it,” Cameron said in a statement.
“These talks will not be easy. They will not be quick. There will be different views and disagreements along the way. But by working together in the right spirit and sticking at it, I believe we can find solutions that will address the concerns of the British people and improve the EU as a whole,” he said.
NARROW VICTORY
Cameron has emerged strengthened from the May 7 general election after his Conservative Party won an unexpected parliamentary majority, albeit a narrow one.
Cameron, who said on Thursday that restricting EU migrants’ access to Britain’s welfare system would be a requirement in his renegotiation, is to set out his reform plans in more detail at a meeting of EU leaders late next month.
Some other European countries are ready to listen to Cameron’s concerns on issues such as immigration, and may be prepared to make limited concessions to keep Britain in the bloc.
However, EU leaders have ruled out changing fundamental EU principles, such as the free movement of workers and a ban on discriminating between workers from different EU states.
“I sincerely hope we can find good solutions for Britain,” Danish Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt told reporters as she arrived for the Riga meeting.
Estonian Prime Minister Taavi Roivas said he would be open to Britain’s proposals, but, in a clear reference to free movement, he said: “We are not thinking that we should lose or even have less of the main, basic freedoms of the EU. I think these freedoms are extremely important.”
REFORMED EU
Governments in the poorer states of eastern Europe are eager to keep their people’s access to better paying work in the west.
The British leader has said his preference is for Britain to remain in a reformed EU, but he has not ruled out campaigning for an exit if he fails to get the changes he wants.
As well as reforms to welfare access for EU migrants, Cameron has said he wants to win an opt-out from the idea of “ever closer” union inside the bloc, cut red tape emanating from Brussels and allow national parliaments to work together to block EU legislation.
A key question is whether Cameron can achieve his aims without reforming the EU treaty, which could open a Pandora’s box of demands from other countries.
“Treaty change is only a way to achieve something. If we agree what we want to achieve, then we definitely don’t say that treaty change is an absolute impossibility, but let’s first agree on what we want to achieve,” Roivas said.
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