Financial News

  • 19 November 2012, 12:20

Miliband: EU Needs Reform To Work For Britain

Ed Miliband has called for major reforms of the European Union and a "hard-headed" approach taken by Britain, ahead of a crunch EU budget summit this week.

The Labour leader - who last month joined forces with Tory rebels to defeat the Government over its strategy to freeze the EU budget - said Labour must not ignore the legitimate concerns of eurosceptics.

He said reform was needed on the budget, on immigration rules, state aid restrictions and austerity measures - but declined to promise a referendum on the UK's future within the EU.

"What I would say is: never shrink from being open about the problems of the European Union," he told the Sunday Telegraph.

Mr Cameron travels to Brussels on Thursday facing pressure from his backbenchers to push for the real-terms spending cut approved in the non-binding Commons vote Labour helped secure.

The Prime Minister, who insists a rise in line with inflation is a more realistic target in the negotiations, has threatened to use the UK's veto if the rise proposed by the commission is not drastically reduced.

He is under mounting pressure to set out plans for a referendum, with restless MPs increasingly concerned about the threat posed to the Conservatives by the UK Independence Party at the next general election.

Ukip scored its best parliamentary by-election result in Corby, coming in third ahead of the Liberal Democrats and an opinion poll today showed more than a quarter of Tory supporters would "seriously consider" switching.

Mr Miliband - who told French president Francois Hollande in the summer that he saw Britain's place as "firmly in Europe" - was accused of opportunism for voting with the Tory rebels.

But he insisted his party could be at once a keen supporter of EU membership and "realist" campaign for reform.

Mr Miliband, who is due to reinforce his points in a speech to business leaders at a CBI conference on Monday, said he believed bosses were "genuinely worried that we're going to sleepwalk towards an exit under Cameron".

"Nobody thinks he's at those negotiations with anything other than with an arm up his back from the people in his own party," he told the newspaper.

"People are always writing us off as if to say that these guys are going toward the exit. That's very dangerous for us."

what do you think?

19 comments

shaun spencer

7:21am on 18/11/2012

Sleepwalk exit from eu.we want to hop ,skip and have one almighty jump out of europe.we can vote for a police commisioner.our local councils, our goverment,yet theres no referendum on europe.

Score: 14

jimmyjedi1979

7:52am on 18/11/2012

Ukip is the only answer. Down with the red and blue.

Score: 16

Paul Grice

8:20am on 18/11/2012

We should not be walking but running to get out of this failed state

Score: 15

Edgar Beckett

8:30am on 18/11/2012

" sleep walking towards the exit " must strike terror into the hearts of every UK citizen.

Score: 10
1 reply

Dave Harrison

10:01am on 18/11/2012

Edgar. I would be more than happy to walk away from the EU with my eyes wide open and never even look back

Score: 10

Byron Eckhardt

9:37am on 18/11/2012

Bosses are worried,they may loose cheep labour from Europe,and have to employ British people instead,its about time labour grew a backbone and stood up for British interests,and British people,and democracy,give us a referendum.and tell the truth about an organization that the auditor's have refused to singe of there books for the last 16 year's.

Score: 9
1 reply

David Francis

9:32am on 19/11/2012

18 Years I believe.

Score: 1

Bazil Brush

9:45am on 18/11/2012

Milliband wants a nice job in europe then. His party wants more people turning up to uk from anywhere. Our border control would be worse if it could be worse never vote labour.

Score: 10

Dave Harrison

10:00am on 18/11/2012

All hot air. We have been talking about reform of large parts of the EU since the late 1970's,eg Fisheries policy, Common Agricultural policy, immigration policy and so far nothing has happened in almost 40 years. Lets put the question to the people IN or OUT and have done with it. Accept the decison one way or another and move on. Trouble is politicians of all parties see the EU as a nice little earner should their UK parliamentary career hit the buffers in much the same way as the Kinnocks did.

Score: 10
2 replies

Russell6730

10:47am on 18/11/2012

Well said Dave.......I just can't improve on that.

Score: 6

gengisken1227

4:15pm on 18/11/2012

Indeed Dave, Blair gave up part of our rebate in return for a promise of reform of the CAP - and what happened....................nothing!

Score: 6

denis parsons

10:22am on 18/11/2012

Let all immigrants come over.They could sleep on the pavements outside our houses,it would add to the flavour or texture of the place.We could be up early and give 'em all a cuppa then go to work giving them the freedom of our lovely country and houses.They could use our cars as minicabs to earn a wage to live while we tax payers go to work on a bus.What's wrong with this?

Score: 8
2 replies

d and d Phillips

7:39pm on 18/11/2012

Don't give them any ideas Denis. You might just get what you 'jestingly' wish for.....

Score: 6

Name witheld

10:17am on 19/11/2012

This comment has been removed for violations of our Terms and Conditions.

Score: 4

denis parsons

10:27am on 18/11/2012

I think deep down we are concerned more with immigration than anything else,it's a very serious issue.

Score: 9
2 replies

Diane Rogers

12:18pm on 18/11/2012

I totally agree with you

Score: 7

David Francis

9:36am on 19/11/2012

You speak for yourelf Denis - I'm more concerned that we pay our taxes for a government who delegate the whole of their responsibilities to a band of larcenous idiots who have no interest in representing the people who pay them. Plus a host of other issues that I do not have time for here. Immigration is just one small part of the issue.

Score: 5

Charles Rickards

10:51am on 18/11/2012

Time for a cost versus benefit analysis. If membership of the EU is good value, we should stay, if not then get out! My suspision is that we pay in way more than we get out. My major concern is the ever mounting cost of bureaucracy, jobs for the sake of jobs, rather than a real and beneficial purpose. As we all know anyone holding a job in the government sector is paid better than the average, but do not necessarily generate any revenues for the UK. The UK's future success is based on our ability to be a net exporter, to receive more than we pay out.

Score: 6
1 reply

shaun spencer

11:04am on 18/11/2012

But thats why we have some absurd health and safety laws as well as other absurd european laws.these arent for any beneficial purpose neither.

Score: 3

Phil A

12:35pm on 18/11/2012

Another idiot who thinks we can reform the EU. The only abswer is to leave.

Score: 10

gengisken1227

4:13pm on 18/11/2012

Politician trys for some cheap votes - I am surprised. The EU intends to destroy democracy in every european country, they are not just mad but evil - you can't reason with these zelots, that people are without medicines in Greece with 55% of young people wasting their lives is of no consequence to the elites. All three parties "promised" a referendum and all three of them lied We voted UKIP in Corby and will do so again next time.

Score: 10
1 reply

gengisken1227

4:17pm on 18/11/2012

Sorry - "tries"

Score: 1

d and d Phillips

7:37pm on 18/11/2012

Give over Ed. Nobody's taken in by your 'crocodile' tears and platitudes. Your tarred all over with European feathers............

Score: 7

megabyte376

8:27pm on 18/11/2012

Why doesn't the government just resign from the EU altogether.

Score: 9

Michael Hawkins

10:01pm on 18/11/2012

Milliband, who?

Score: 8

blue side

10:27pm on 18/11/2012

How cheap talk is when you are in opposition

Score: 8

Dave Harrison

11:19am on 19/11/2012

The CAP swallows 37% of the EU budget just to allow French farmers to farm in the way they have since the revolution. Try and change it and national interests come to the fore with a firm Non! Then you have the east european countries whose development is being paid for by the net contributers in the west of europe all jealously guarding their national interests. And then Millibland tells us it needs reforming to suit our national interests. This isn't a union it is a rabble each looking out for themselves. Time to get out.

Score: 4

Name witheld

12:26pm on 19/11/2012

This comment has been removed for violations of our Terms and Conditions.

Score: 1

John Mechelen

8:56am on 20/11/2012

It needs scrapping,stupid boy.

Score: 1
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