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  UK PM, ex-union leader join forces to fight Brexit

UK PM, ex-union leader join forces to fight Brexit

AFP
Published : Apr 29, 2016, 2:05 am IST
Updated : Apr 29, 2016, 2:05 am IST

British Prime Minister David Cameron joined forces with a former trade union leader on Thursday in a rare alliance to urge voters to stay in the EU, warning that leaving posed a threat to jobs, wages

British Prime Minister David Cameron joined forces with a former trade union leader on Thursday in a rare alliance to urge voters to stay in the EU, warning that leaving posed a threat to jobs, wages and prices.

The Conservative leader and Brendan Barber, the former head of the Trades Union Congress (TUC) umbrella body, said the stakes were so high in the June 23 referendum that “it is right that the rules of conventional politics be temporarily set aside”.

In a joint article in The Guardian, they warned that the “economic shock” of a Brexit would see unemployment rise, growth fall, less open trading leading to lower productivity and lower wages, and put pressure on the pound, leading to more expensive goods.

“While staying in Europe offers workers in the UK the best prospects of rising prosperity, leaving poses what we call a triple threat: to working people’s jobs, to their wages and to the prices we all pay in the shops,” they wrote.

The article comes after the government made a series of concessions to the controversial Trade Union Bill, including on a measure that would have cut union funding. It prompted speculation that ministers had struck a deal with the unions to take a more vocal role in the EU campaign. Downing Street said the two issues were separate.

Meanwhile, a British World War II veteran living in Italy on Thursday lost his legal challenge against a rule barring long-term expatriates from voting in Britain’s EU referendum.

High court judge David Lloyd Jones rejected claims by Harry Shindler (94) and his co-claimant, Belgium resident Jacquelyn MacLe-nnan, that the rule restricted their rights to freedom of movement under European law. The judge told London’s high court that the 2015 referendum act “is not a restriction on the rights of free movement”. Lawyers acting for the expats said they will seek leave to appeal the decision.

The ruling is a relief for the government, whose lawyers argued that a decision in favour of the claimants could have made it impossible to hold the membership referendum on June 23, as planned.

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