Britain's Major warns 'real possibility' of EU exit
[LONDON] Former prime minister John Major on Thursday warned there was a "real possibility" that Britain will leave the European Union in a referendum and called for more immigration controls.
Britain "may be poised to leave the European Union", Major said in a speech in Berlin at the Konrad Adenauer Stiftung, the foundation of Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservative party CDU.
Major said he himself was in favour of Britain staying in, according to a text of the speech published on his website.
But he added that "opposition has reached a critical mass and now, for the first time, there is a serious possibility that our electorate could vote to leave the EU".
"I put the chance of exit at just under 50 per cent but if the negotiations go badly that percentage will rise. Conversely, with genuine reform, it will fall." Prime Minister David Cameron has said he will hold an in-or-out referendum on Britain's membership of the EU in 2017 if he wins a general election in May.
He has promised to campaign for Britain to remain in "a reformed Europe", although he has not specified the exact changes that he wants implemented.
Major said Britain wanted to "qualify" EU migration because "our small island simply cannot absorb the present and projected numbers at the current speed".
"It is not physically or politically possible without huge public disquiet," he said.
The Conservative politician took over as leader in 1990 after Margaret Thatcher's downfall and served until Tony Blair's victory in 1997.
AFP
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
International
Israel concerned over possible ICC arrest warrants related to Gaza war
China’s top airlines improve balance sheet in Q1; outlook positive for May Day
G7 reaches deal to exit from coal by 2035
US, Britain urge Hamas to accept Israeli truce proposal
Saudi Arabia says economic revamp momentum intact as plans shift
German inflation creeps up to 2.4% in April