David Cameron 'Insane' For Pledging To Stay In EU, Warns Lord Digby Jones

'Insane' Cameron Under Fire For Promising To Stay In EU
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British Prime Minister David Cameron addresses the media at the end of the EU Budget summit at the European Council building in Brussels, Friday, Feb. 8, 2013. European Union leaders have agreed to a a significantly reduced budget that represents the first decrease in a budget in the union's history. European Council President Herman Van Rompuy said Friday that the agreement had been reached after two days of negotiations. (AP Photo/Geert Vanden Wijngaert)
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David Cameron has been branded "insane" for pledging to stay in the European Union regardless of how well his attempts to claw back powers from Brussels go.

Lord Digby Jones, former trade minister under Gordon Brown, said: "The tactic of promising to stay in the EU regardless of what the Prime Minister can negotiate is insane. When did anyone start negotiations with 'It’s OK, we don’t mean it, we will do what you want anyway' as an opening gambit?"

Writing in the Times, the peer warned that the Prime Minister was unlikely to get anything beyond minor changes to Britain's relationship with the European Union, writing: ""the chances of certain big countries changing things is nil".

Lord Jones of Birmingham insisted that the UK should be ready to leave the political bloc, calling for it to be put "on the negotiating table". This comes as research suggested that 3,580 new EU rules have come in under David Cameron's premiership and that EU rules cost £27.4 billion a year.

Lord Jones' intervention comes as MPs prepare to vote on a bill to legislate for an EU referendum by 2017 on Friday. However, there are fears that the bill could be scuppered by an amendment proposed by Tory backbencher Adam Afriyie, who is pushing for the referendum to be brought forward to 2014.

The peer, who used to be head of the Confederation of British Industry trade body, branded the group "deluded" for insisting that major reforms could still be possible.

CBI director-general John Cridland said: "The EU isn't perfect and there is a growing unease about the creeping extension of EU authority. Europe has to become more open, competitive and outward-looking if we are to grow and create opportunities and jobs for all our citizens.

Brexiters
Nigel Farage(01 of09)
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The Ukip leader and MEP is the most famous 'outer'. After his party took over a 100 council seats in May's local election's Nigel Farage is hoping to win the 2014 European elections and then gain MPs in Westminster in 2015. He has confirmed he will seek a parliamentary seat himself. (credit:PA)
Lord Lawson(02 of09)
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Margaret Thatcher's former chancellor and a true 'Tory grandee' revealed in The Times that if and when there is a referendum "I shall be voting out". He also stuck the boot into the David Cameron by saying the prime minister's attempts to renegotiate the terms of the UK's relationship with the EU would be "inconsequential". (credit:PA)
Backbench Brexiters(03 of09)
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There are quite a few Conservative MPs who would like to wave goodbye to Brussels. Ken Clarke has said the figure is as low as 30 despite the strong eurosceptic feeling on the backbenches. However the exact number is not clear. Mid-Bedforshire MP Nadine Dorries, who remains suspended from the Conservative Party, is currently talk tof the eurosceptic town amid rumours she may defect to Ukip. Other backbench Brexiters include Bill Cash, Douglas Carswell, Peter Bone and Philip Davies and former defence minister Sir Gerald Howarth. (credit:PA)
Labour's 'Let's Leave' Lot(04 of09)
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Most of the anti-EU focus is on the Tory benches. But there are more than a handful of Labour MPs would would like to quit Brussels as well. Eurosceptics include Frank Field, Kate Hoey, Austin Mitchell, and Gisela Stuart.Stuart has argued the status quo is "not sustainable" and Britain should leave. (credit:PA)
Media Moguls(05 of09)
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Rupert Murdoch has warned that the EU will "sink" the UK. The News International and boss caused a stir when he met Nigel Farage for dinner in London recently and said the Ukip leader was "reflecting opinion" with his anti-EU views.In November 2010 Richard Desmond’s Daily Express became the first UK newspaper actively to call for Britain to leave the EU, launching a ‘Get Britain Out’ campaign (credit:PA)
I'm A Celeb, Get Us Out Of Here(06 of09)
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Of course no campaign is complete without a bit of star power. The pro-EU camp have Eddie Izzard, who do the Brexiters have?Joan Collins, a 'patron' of Ukip, wants the UK to leave. "The EU, controlled from Brussels, cares only about itself," she said in March. (credit:PA)
The Business Types(07 of09)
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Most business leaders do indeed seem content with what Lawson called the "warm embrace of the European single market", but there are a few dissenters. Private equity guys Jon Moulton and Edmund Truell are two and Next boss and Tory peer Simon Wolfson has said: "Britain should stay in Europe, but only on the right terms". (credit:PA)
The Commentariat(08 of09)
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There are a number of loud voices whinnying on the sidelines to say "neigh" to the EU notably Melanie Phillips, Richard Littlejohn, Tom Utley, Simon Heffer.Basically the Daily Mail stable. (credit:PA)
Edging Towards Exit(09 of09)
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Several high-profile politicians appear to be on the verge of calling for the UK to exit the EU - but just are not there yet.Former defence secretary Liam Fox - pictured here with a big gun - has said "life outside the EU holds no terror" should David Cameron's hopes of negotiating a new treaty fail.Education secretary Michael Gove is said to have told friends the UK has "nothing to be scared of" by leaving Europe.And many other eurosceptic cabinet ministers, including Iain Duncan Smith and Owen Paterson are likely to share that view. (credit:PA)