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Tory MPs join Labour to push for EU budget cuts

Nigel Morris
Monday 29 October 2012 23:10 EDT
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David Cameron faces a new Commons showdown with the Tory right over Europe tomorrow as his own MPs join forces with Labour to press for cuts in the EU budget.

Downing Street made clear that he was not going to bow to their demands – which it regards as unrealistic – to support a reduction in spending by Brussels between 2014 and 2020.

Mr Cameron, backed by his Liberal Democrat deputy Nick Clegg, is now preparing for a test of strength over the issue at Westminster in a vote tomorrow.

In an attempt to limit the scale of the backbench rebellion, Tory MPs will be whipped to oppose demands for a real-terms cut in EU spending.

The vote has been given added significance by the decision by Ed Balls, the shadow Chancellor, and the Labour leadership to support a cut in spending. Chris Leslie, the Labour Treasury spokesman, said: "When there are so many swingeing cuts at home, we do want a real-terms reduction and anything above inflation should not be prioritised."

The Government is already at odds with major EU countries, including France and Germany, which favour an above-inflation rise to the EU budget, by arguing for a real-terms freeze.

But the Tory MP Mark Pritchard, who played a prominent role when 81 rebels voted for a referendum on Europe last year, challenged Mr Cameron to go further and show "real fiscal leadership" by wielding Britain's veto on EU spending.

Mark Reckless, a Conservative MP, said: "Some real-terms reduction is surely not an unachievable or excessively radical goal, given the extent to which we and other EU countries are making less-palatable cuts at home."

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