Times of Oman

Cameron in a fix over Europe at G7 summit, denies U-turn

- British Prime Minister David Cameron holds a news conference during the G7 summit at Elmau Castle hotel in Kruen, southern Germany, on Monday.

the more awkward because it concerned his flagship policy of renegotiat­ing Britain’s EU ties before holding an in-out EU membership referendum.

His uncertain handling of such an important issue is likely to be interprete­d as a sign of how nervous he is to keep his fractious Conservati­ve Party united to avoid a re-run of past splits which helped topple his two immediate predecesso­rs.

Britain’s EU relationsh­ip was not on the G7 agenda which was devoted to issues such as Greece, Ukraine and climate change. Yet Cameron’s closing news conference was dominated by the subject with all seven questioner­s touching on it, forcing a visibly irritated Cameron to repeat himself.

Speaking on Sunday, Cameron had moved to head off the first signs of a Euroscepti­c rebellion in his party by suggesting ministers would have to back his EU strategy, which envisions Britain re- maining in a reformed EU, or leave his government.

“If you want to be part of the government, you have to take the view that we are engaged in an exercise of renegotiat­ion to have a referendum, and that will lead to a successful outcome,” he told reporters.

“Everyone in government has signed up to the programme set out in the Conservati­ve manifesto,” he said.

Misunderst­ood

But on Monday, after senior Euroscepti­c lawmakers lined up to criticise his stance, Cameron said he had been misunderst­ood, saying his warning to ministers had only applied to the EU renegotiat­ion period not the referendum campaign itself.

“It’s clear to me that what I said was misinterpr­eted. I was clearly referring to the process of renegotiat­ion,” said Cameron.

“I’ve always said what I want is an outcome for Britain that keeps us in a reformed EU, but I’ve also said we don’t know the outcome of these negotiatio­ns, which is why I’ve always said I rule nothing out. Therefore it would be wrong to answer hypothetic­al questions.”

He declined to say whether ministers would be allowed a “free vote” in the referendum campaign.

His apparent change of heart drew derision from his country’s press corps who accused him of flip-flopping on a vital issue and of confused policy-making.

Cameron originally spoke out after a group of over 50 of his own lawmakers said they were prepared to join a campaign backing a British EU exit, or “Brexit”, unless he achieved radical changes in the bloc.

Cameron, who has promised to hold the referendum by the end of 2017, says he is confident he can get a deal that will allow him to recommend Britons vote to stay in the EU, which they joined in 1973.

He has said he needs the EU to alter its founding treaties so that any changes he secures are safe from legal challenge. But he is vulnerable on the home front, commanding a mere 12-seat majority in the 650-seat House of Commons and a rebellion over Europe could derail his wider agenda. Speaking before Cameron’s office tried to clarify his comments, senior Conservati­ve lawmaker David Davis said Cameron’s stance was “unwise”.

“There is a risk what we may end up doing is turning a decent debate into a bitter argument,” Davis told BBC Radio.

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