British Chancellor raises prospect of UK leaving EU

The UK's Chancellor George Osborne has raised the prospect that Britain could leave the European Union unless there is change in Brussels.

British Chancellor raises prospect of UK leaving EU

The UK's Chancellor George Osborne has raised the prospect that Britain could leave the European Union unless there is change in Brussels.

In an interview with the German Die Welt newspaper, the Chancellor said that he very much wanted the UK to continue as an EU member state.

However he made clear that in order for that to happen, there would have to be meaningful reform of the current arrangements.

“I very much hope that Britain remains a member of the EU. But in order that we can remain in the European Union, the EU must change,” he said.

A Treasury aide insisted that his comments were fully consistent with the Government’s position – that the EU needs to change “and indeed is changing”.

However the fact such a senior member of the Government is prepared publicly to discuss the possibility Britain may be unable to stay in the EU is likely to be welcomed by Tory eurosceptics who have been pressing for an in-out referendum on Britain’s membership.

Mr Osborne made his comments during a visit to Berlin on Tuesday although they have only just been published.

Yesterday a key ally of German chancellor Angela Merkel issued a sharp warning that any attempt at “blackmailing” member states into accepting change would backfire on Britain.

Bundestag European affairs committee chairman Gunther Krichbaum said a referendum could leave the UK isolated in Europe.

“You cannot create a political future if you are blackmailing other states. That will not help Britain,” he said.

Meanwhile the US assistant secretary for European affairs, Philip Gordon, has made clear the Obama administration wanted “a strong British voice” in the EU and referendums risked turning countries “inward”.

Downing Street said today that David Cameron had talked Barack Obama through Britain’s approach to Europe when they spoke before Christmas and that the president was supportive.

“We want to change our relationship with the European Union and seek consent on that,” the Prime Minister’s official spokesman said.

“He (Mr Obama) was supportive of the approach that the Prime Minister set out.”

Mr Cameron is due to spell out his position more fully in a keynote speech later this month.

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