Khaleej Times

Cameron faces resistance in securing EU-UK accord

Progress made but no deal yet despite lengthy discussion­s

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brussels — David Cameron struggled at a European Union summit on Friday to overcome last pockets of resistance to a deal designed to keep Britain in the 28-nation bloc, with diplomats forecastin­g an agreement within hours.

“We are moving forward but we are not yet at a stage where a deal is almost done,” a British official told reporters after the British Prime Minister held all-night negotiatio­ns with top EU officials and a handful of leaders with specific objections to the draft text.

Cameron was hoping to fly home and chair a cabinet meeting later on Friday to endorse what he calls a “new settlement” with the EU, setting in motion plans to call a referendum on Britain’s future in the Union, probably for June 23.

The stakes are high for both Britain and the EU, with opinion polls showing voters almost evenly split. The risks of Cameron’s strategy were highlighte­d on Friday when an opinion poll showed the campaign to leave the bloc had a two-per cent lead with 36 per cent support. The TNS poll showed 34 per cent of British voters wanted to stay in the bloc, 7 per cent would not vote and 23 per cent were undecided.

All sides at the summit said the toughest issue remained Britain’s drive to restrict welfare benefits for migrant workers from other EU countries, with east European states fighting to preserve the rights of expatriate­s already working in the UK and elsewhere.

In a reminder of the complex bargaining of EU politics, a Greek government official said Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras had also warned he could block a British deal if he failed to secure new assurances on dealing with Europe’s migration crisis.

Summit chairman Donald Tusk, who had hoped to wrap up a deal at an “English breakfast” at 10am, pushed back the resumption of the group meeting until after 1.30pm for what aides dubbed an “English lunch”. Further delays then put that back to 3.30pm.

Tusk held a series of so-called “confession­al” meetings with individual leaders to try to clear remaining obstacles in the meantime.

Diplomats said difference­s with France over London’s demands for a mechanism to protect its financial centre from intrusive euro zone regulation had been narrowed down to just two words.

Cameron has promised Britons he will exclude new European immigrants from in-work benefits for four years and cut child benefit for workers whose families remain at home.

Czech Prime Minister Bohuslav Sobotka, representi­ng that group, was battling to prevent the measures being applied to more than a million EU workers already in Britain and to avoid other countries piggy-backing on the child benefit cut.

“The Czech Republic aims for its clear time limitation, exclusion of a possibilit­y to implement it permanentl­y, and limiting its applicatio­n to the UK if possible,” Sobotka said.

However, Danish Prime Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen said his country too was keen to apply a plan to index child benefit for EU workers whose children remain in their native country to their home country’s cost of living if Britain won.

Cameron was keen to show Brit-

A deal is visible, a deal is possible but the timing will depend on how much drama some countries would like to see ish voters he was fighting hard to secure a deal which he has called “the best of both worlds”.

“I was here till five o’clock this morning working through this and we’ve made some progress but there’s still no deal,” he told reporters on Friday morning as he returned for more talks after a short rest.

“As I’ve said I’ll only do a deal if we get what Britain needs. So we are going to get back in there, and we are going to do some more work and I’ll do everything I can.”

Britain is already the EU’s most semi-detached member, having opted out of joining the euro single currency, the Schengen zone of passport-free travel and many areas of police and judicial cooperatio­n.

Many leaders said they felt they were at a historic turning point for European integratio­n.

No country has ever voted to leave the Union. Britain is the EU’s second-largest economy and one of its two permanent members on the UN Security Council. Its exit would end the vision of the EU as the natural home for European democracie­s and reverse the continent’s post-World War Two march toward “ever closer union”.

Belgium, the most federalist of EU members, was pressing for a clause to ensure the deal with Britain would automatica­lly cease to exist in case of a vote to leave — to

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