British public backs EU veto, coalition cracks
British Prime Minister David Cameron won public approval yesterday for his decision to veto a new EU treaty to solve the eurozone crisis, but cracks began to appear in his coalition government over the move.
A new poll revealed 62 percent support for Cameron’s decision following all-night talks in Brussels overnight on Thursday, echoing the warm welcome it received among eurosceptics within his Conservative party.
The Mail on Sunday survey also confirmed strong public backing – 66 percent – for a referendum on Britain’s role in the European Union, which the eurosceptics have long been calling for.
Cameron is keen to avoid such a vote, however, partly because of the damage it could do to his coalition with the pro-European Liberal Democrats – and reports suggest his dramatic veto is already causing problems.
Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg, the deputy prime minister, has publicly backed Cameron’s move but a source close to him told the Independent on Sunday that he was privately furious at the way the Brussels summit turned out.
“Nick certainly doesn’t think this is a good deal for Britain, for British jobs or British growth,” the source said, saying Clegg “couldn’t believe it” when he heard the news of how the talks ended.
Describing the result as a “spectacular failure to deliver in the country’s interest”, the source said: “It leaves us isolated in Europe and that is not in our national interest. Nick’s fear is that we become the lonely man of Europe.”
Cameron had sought to secure safeguards for Britain’s financial sector from new measures designed to resolve the debt crisis. When these were rejected, he used his veto to block attempts to enshrine the changes into the EU’s treaties.
The other 26 nations have now agreed in principle to join a “new fiscal compact” through intergovernmental agreements, but this has sparked fears that Britain will be left out of future key discussions on EU economic issues.
Another senior Lib Dem, Business Secretary Vince Cable, openly warned that Britain was left in a “bad place”, echoing concerns from some business leaders that London would not be able to stop new financial regulations.
“I am not criticising the prime minister personally. Our policy was a collective decision by the coalition. We finished in a bad place,” he told the Sunday Telegraph newspaper.
The Tories and the centrist Lib Dems have been governing together since the May 2010 election.
“We did not go to Brussels seeking a row. We went in search of agreement. It is a matter of regret that no agreement that was acceptable to all 27 EU countries could be reached,” Foreign secretary William Hague wrote in the Sunday Telegraph.
“But it is better to have no change to the EU treaties than a change that did not protect our interests and work for all EU member states.”
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