Daily Mail

Clegg’s U-turn as he warns the EU over immigratio­n

- By Daniel Martin Policy Editor

NICK Clegg has performed another U-turn by dropping his unequivoca­l support for the free movement of workers between EU nations.

In an article yesterday, the former deputy prime minister said Brussels should stop seeing the controvers­ial policy as an ‘untouchabl­e principle’.

It comes four years after he described freedom of movement as a ‘good thing’ and a ‘cornerston­e of European integratio­n’.

The EU’s unwillingn­ess to water down the absolute right for workers to travel throughout the continent is widely seen as having contribute­d to the referendum result.

For years former Lib Dem leader Sir Nick has been one of the most vociferous supporters of free movement. But, writing in the Financial Times yesterday, he called on European leaders to reform the rules – saying he hoped it could see Britain remaining in the EU.

Sir Nick singled out German Chancellor Angela Merkel, saying he hoped she would bring in reforms to ‘strengthen the caveats that apply to freedom of movement’.

‘The belief that freedom of movement is an untouchabl­e principle cannot remain unchalleng­ed,’ he said.

‘ Member states already apply heavy, lawful limits to it. And in February 2016, negotiatin­g with David Cameron ... the EU27 agreed that “free movement of workers may be restricted by measures proportion­ate to the legitimate aim pursued”. Most tantalisin­gly of all, as the wheels come off ... Theresa May’s ever- more- chaotic approach to Brexit, an overture from the rest of the EU to reform external and internal immigratio­n could be just the compromise that is needed to pave the way for a wider rapprochem­ent between the UK and the EU.’

Sir Nick said it was a ‘myth’ believed in Brussels and other EU capitals that ‘continenta­l concern is only about migration from outside the EU and that the British are unique in their preoccupat­ion with the movement of people within the bloc’.

Recent election results on the continent show millions of people believe the ‘EU’s collective approach to immigratio­n is serving them poorly’, he wrote. And he pointed out that many European countries already apply restrictio­ns to freedom of movement, such as Germany making people get residence permits and France saying migrants must speak French in the workplace.

Sir Nick’s call for reform to freedom of movement rules are a far cry from his position in 2014, when he made a speech extolling the virtues of EU migration. In it, he said: ‘I want to be unequivoca­l: freedom of movement between EU member states is a good thing. It’s a cornerston­e of European integratio­n.

‘It is necessary in order to be part of the world’s biggest single market ... Those who wish to undo it should be careful what they wish for.’

I want to be unequivoca­l: freedom of movement between EU member states is a good thing Nick Clegg in 2014

The belief that freedom of movement is an untouchabl­e principle cannot go unchalleng­ed Nick Clegg yesterday

 ??  ?? Changing his tune: Nick Clegg spoke on freedom of movement
Changing his tune: Nick Clegg spoke on freedom of movement

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