Oman Daily Observer

Cameron’s EU troubles

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David Cameron heads to Brussels on Thursday hoping to breathe new life into Britain’s bid to recast its ties with the European Union, which has hit problems over a plan to cut benefits for migrants. With a referendum on leaving the EU due by the end of 2017, Cameron’s plan to curb migrant benefits for the first four years they are in Britain faces stiff resistance from other leaders, who see it as discrimina­tory.

“Cameron’s hardest battle is certain to be on welfare reform,” said Agata Gostynska-Jakubowska of the Centre for European Reform (CER) think-tank. “He has made a fetish of in-work benefits in his negotiatio­ns...on this issue, he is alone against 25 member states.”

The measure is one of the four main pillars of the prime minister’s strategy to renegotiat­e Britain’s membership of the EU and then campaign to stay in the bloc. Early hopes that an overall deal for Britain to take to voters could come at this week’s summit after Cameron outlined his wish list in a letter to EU president Donald Tusk last month have been dashed. The pair are now aiming for a February agreement instead. But the tricky question is how to secure it, given the scale of opposition to Cameron’s benefits proposal.

Members of Cameron’s centre-right Conservati­ve party, which has a strong euroscepti­c strand, have been voicing their concerns in public.

London Mayor Boris Johnson wrote in Monday’s Daily Telegraph that Brussels had given “the bum’s rush” — an expression referring to an abrupt dismissal — to Cameron’s “modest” proposal.

Johnson, seen as a possible successor to Cameron, added that the EU needed to recognise that Britain was a “special case” due to the number of migrants it attracts. Owen Paterson, a euroscepti­c former minister, told Sky News Sunday that Britain had been promised “a total change” in its relationsh­ip with the EU. “What actually is happening, he (Cameron) is like someone in a little dinghy, bumping along, being towed along by the enormous great Channel ferry,” Paterson said.

The prime minister’s spokeswoma­n denied Britain had been given “the bum’s rush” by the rest of the EU. She expected the renegotiat­ion bid would be the main topic of conversati­on at Thursday night’s summit dinner. While British officials deny reports they have dropped the four-year benefit restrictio­n proposal, it is clear that Cameron’s shuttle diplomacy with European leaders in recent days has been complicate­d. “Attitudes to immigratio­n are a strong predictor of likely support for leaving the EU,” a paper from foreign affairs think-tank Chatham House said this month. “The more salient this issue becomes or the more it concerns voters, the more likely it is that the number of ‘outers’ will rise.”

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