The Sunday Telegraph

New Tory alliance fights to stay in EU

Group warns against a ‘leap into the void’ as battle against Euroscepti­cs begins in earnest

- By Tim Ross

SENIOR POLITICAL CORRESPOND­ENT THE Conservati­ve Party’s war over Europe dramatical­ly escalates today as senior Tories launch a new campaign to keep Britain in the European Union.

A new group, Conservati­ves for Reform in Europe, has been created to lead the fightback against Euroscepti­cs with a warning to voters that leaving the EU would be a leap into the void.

The group will be run by Nick Herbert, a former minister, and was set up with the full knowledge of David Cameron, who is expected to welcome its formation.

Writing in The Sunday Telegraph, Mr Herbert says he wants to “give voice to the thousands of Tory members and supporters” who want to stay in a reformed EU and want the Prime Minister to succeed in his negotiatio­ns with Brussels.

He argues that Mr Cameron’s proposed reforms would boost British trade, restore “sovereignt­y” by giving more power to national parliament­s over EU laws, and stop the welfare system acting as a “draw” for European migrants coming to the UK. Leaving the EU, he warns, would put investment in Britain at risk, undermine policing and security, and jeopardise access to the European market for businesses.

Mr Herbert places national security at the heart of the debate, warning that quitting the EU could put Britain in danger. “Leaving without the first idea of what we might get instead would be to jump into a void,” he says.

The announceme­nt comes days after Chris Grayling, a leading Euroscepti­c, became the first Cabinet minister to declare his opposition to Britain’s continued EU membership on the current terms. Writing in The Daily Telegraph last week, he hinted that he was likely to campaign for Britain to leave – without substantia­l reforms – as he backed Mr Cameron’s drive to overhaul the terms of Britain’s EU membership.

The key division between Mr Herbert and Euroscepti­cs is that the Out campaigner­s believe Mr Cameron’s reforms do not go far enough to restore British sovereignt­y. Tory Out campaigner­s also say leaving the EU would pose no threat to Britain’s national and economic security.

The announceme­nt of the new group comes as Mr Cameron’s negotiatio­ns with other EU leaders reach a critical phase.

He has promised to renegotiat­e the terms of Britain’s EU membership to regain control over immigratio­n, protect British businesses, improve competitiv­eness and keep the UK out of any future “European superstate”.

He hopes to agree a final deal with EU leaders at a summit in Brussels next month, enabling him to call the “inout” referendum for June or July.

Mr Cameron insists publicly that he has not ruled out calling for Britain to leave the EU if he does not get the deal he wants in Brussels.

However, Euroscepti­c ministers and MPs believe he has already begun using “scare” tactics to persuade voters

‘Leaving without the first idea of what we might get instead would be to jump into a void’

MP FOR ARUNDEL & SOUTH DOWNS FIFTEEN years ago, as chief executive of Business for Sterling, I set up the national No campaign against joining the euro. Our slogan was “Europe yes, euro no”.

We saw the danger of giving up the pound and control of our interest rates, but also the benefit to business and jobs of being in the single market. Some argued that we should join the euro regardless, just as they argue today that we should stay in the European Union come what may.

But most Conservati­ves take a more hard-headed view. We see the economic advantage of being in a market without tariff barriers, and of co-operation in many areas, but have deep concerns about a growing loss of national sovereignt­y and the drive towards a European superstate.

We are concerned about the growth of regulation; we worry that the Eurozone’s need to support their currency will demand even deeper integratio­n; and while we know that free movement is an integral part of being in a successful market, we believe the levels of migration to our country have been unsustaina­ble.

It is precisely these concerns that the Prime Minister’s proposed reforms to the EU are intended to address.

Naturally, the changes have been dismissed by those for whom no reform will ever be enough, but in fact they would be substantia­l.

They would ensure that Britain’s interests outside the Eurozone would be protected, allowing countries with the euro to integrate more deeply without imposing damaging regulation on us.

They would require the EU to have a long-overdue focus on competitiv­eness, signing new trade deals and cut- ting regulation. On the crucial matter of sovereignt­y, the UK would be exempted from “ever closer union”, and there would be a greater role for national parliament­s.

And on immigratio­n, the issue of most concern to the public, the abuse of free movement would be prevented. By stopping people from claiming generous in-work benefits until they have lived here and contribute­d for a number of years, we could ensure that our welfare system is not an artificial draw for people from the rest of the EU to come to Britain.

The significan­ce of these reforms is that they would not only halt the drive towards ever deeper integratio­n; they would actually begin to reverse the process. That would represent a fundamenta­l change in our relationsh­ip with the EU.

This is why I believe that Conservati­ves should support the Prime Minister’s renegotiat­ion, and why this week I and others will launch Conservati­ves for Reform in Europe. Our aim is to give a voice to the thousands of party members and supporters who believe that change in Europe is vital, want the Prime Minister to succeed, and if he does, will vote to stay in a reformed EU.

If we cannot secure the reforms Britain needs, many of us would be prepared to leave – and our EU partners who must decide whether to agree to these changes should know that.

But that is not the same as saying that we should leave regardless. And let’s be clear: leaving would not be a cost-free option. Quite apart from the risk to inward investment, the price of access to the market which British business requires would likely be a substantia­l payment to the EU, the free movement of labour, and no say over the rules – all the very things that proponents of leaving claim we would no longer have.

We would not have regained sovereignt­y at all. It would not be in the interests of the club from which we had just walked out to give us a free trade agreement with all the benefits and none of the costs.

It’s not hard to be vexed by some of the ways the EU works. But irritation is not enough to end a 40-year relationsh­ip. We need soberly to weigh up the costs and the benefits. And the potential risks are not just economic. Today security concerns are paramount.

As minister for policing and criminal justice, I became acutely aware of the value of European arrangemen­ts to share intelligen­ce and speed up the return of criminal suspects to bring them to justice. And by opting out of criminal justice and security measures that do not suit Britain, while taking part in those that keep us safe, we decide for ourselves where it is in our national interest to co-operate.

If reforms are secured, Britain would have the best of both worlds. We would be outside the euro, and protected from deeper integratio­n, but able to access the single market. We would remain in the world’s greatest trading bloc of over 500 million people, but still be outside the Schengen area and so able to maintain our borders.

We would need to be very sure about the alternativ­e before throwing such an advantageo­us position away, yet we are not. Leaving without the first idea of what we might get instead would be to jump into a void.

What matters most to the British people is their jobs and security, living standards and public services. Whatever our views about the EU, the key long-term challenges facing this country – how to deliver health and social care with an ageing population, how to increase our competitiv­eness and productivi­ty, how to deal with our debt and live within our means – would not suddenly be solved by leaving.

Tackling these issues requires us to continue with the successful policies that have put us at the top of the world league for economic growth. And we need to prevent the most Left-wing Labour leader most of us have seen in a lifetime from ever gaining office.

Our critics said that a referendum would never happen, but the electorate put their trust in the Prime Minister, and he has delivered the first vote on EU membership in a generation. Now we should support his fight for reform – and when the issue has been settled once and for all by the public, the Conservati­ve family must come together, and continue to rebuild our country.

‘The key long-term challenges facing this country would not suddenly be solved by leaving’

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