The co-Chairman of the new group explains why it’s here and what it’s for.
Ministers who want Brexit should be free to campaign for No during the referendum. And the Prime Minister should be free to get on with the renegotiation he wants.
He also says the British people would come to regret an In vote.
Tony Blair is the least trusted voice on the issue. But Nigel Farage is the second least trusted.
We won in the UK, entered government in Finland, welcomed a new Italian party, won the Polish Presidency and are optimistic about the Danish election.
The new MP for Uxbridge and South Ruislip made his (second) maiden speech in the Commons yesterday.
30 per cent say that Britain should stay in the EU and 58 per cent that it should leave it – figures very close to those that our survey found in February.
Would the EU stab Ireland in the back just to hurt Britain?
The campaign group has trawled the archives to find the list of changes the Prime Minister and others have demanded from Brussels.
“Renegotiation” within the existing treaties is just changing EU policy – but our objection is that Brussels has the power to make policy at all.
Some ultra-federalist lawyers might protest at such an interpretation. But do you really imagine that anyone would seek to push Britain out over a technicality?
The cantons of Switzerland, like the nations of the Eurozone, are each entitled to make their own decisions on spending, taxation and borrowing.
For those opposed to greater European integration, the Prime Minister’s promise of an EU referendum is a thrilling thing indeed.
There have been some recent positive signs from the ECJ that EU states are within their rights already to curb blatant benefit abuse by migrants.
It gives free trade a bad name with the Left, causes delays in getting progress on market access, and leaves us unable to shape an agreement which suits us.