2016年2月20日 星期六

EU referendum date set for 23 June after David Cameron secures reforms giving UK 'special status'


英國首相卡麥隆:「我們即將對國家做出一個極為重要的決定:留在一個經過改革的歐盟,或者離開。這個選擇關係到我們捫心自問:我們希望英國成為一個什麼樣的國家,為子女營造什麼樣的未來。」

今年6月23日星期四,全英國人民將投下一張無比重要的選票。倫敦當局20日宣布,將在當天舉行決定英國是否要脫離歐洲聯盟(European…
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EU referendum date set for 23 June after David Cameron secures reforms giving UK 'special status'


The announcement was made after David Cameron met with cabinet ministers
David Cameron has set the date for a referendum on Britain’s membership of the EU for 23 June this year.
The Prime Minister made the long-awaited announcement after meeting with minsters at Downing Street to discuss reforms he secured yesterday following two days of talks in Brussels.
It was the first time the UK’s cabinet has met on a Saturday since the Falklands War more than 30 years ago, showing the significance of the occasion.
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Ministers are now free to publicly back the “leave” campaign and Michael Gove, Iain Duncan Smith and Chris Grayling are believed to be among those opposing the Government’s official stance.
Mr Cameron has vowed to campaign for Britain to stay in the 28-nation bloc “with all my heart and soul” after securing a package of changes with European leaders.
He said the reforms, which include curbs on EU workers' benefits, protections for non-euro nations and an opt-out from “ever closer union”, cemented Britain's “special status” despite a series of compromises.
But Eurosceptics - including many within Mr Cameron's Conservative Party - dismissed the package as meaningless and said only withdrawal could restore sufficient powers to the country from Brussels.

Nigel Farage dismissed the “truly pathetic deal” and urged voters to seize the “golden opportunity” to vote for a Brexit, which is Ukip’s foundational principle.
Jeremy Corbyn dismissed Mr Cameron's re-negotiation as a “sideshow” but confirmed Labour would be campaigning for an ”in“ vote.
"Despite the fanfare, the deal that David Cameron has made in Brussels on Britain's relationship with the EU is a sideshow, and the changes he has negotiated are largely irrelevant to the problems most British people face and the decision we must now make," he said.
"We will be campaigning to keep Britain in Europe in the coming referendum, regardless of David Cameron's tinkering, because it brings investment, jobs and protection for British workers and consumers."

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