Tories 'must honour EU vote pledge'

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4 May 2013

The Conservatives must give voters "greater certainty" that they will be given a say on Britain's membership of the European Union, Home Secretary Theresa May has acknowledged.

After the Tories suffered heavy losses to the UK Independence Party in the council elections, Mrs May said it was essential voters believed the party would honour its promise to hold an in/out referendum on EU membership after the next general election.

However she rejected calls from some senior Conservatives to bring forward the date of the referendum and stage it in this parliament in order to finally kill off the appeal of Ukip to Tory voters.

She said that it was important that they stood by David Cameron's plan to re-negotiate the terms of Britain's membership and then put the new settlement to the country.

She told BBC Radio 4: "If you want to take a re-negotiated settlement to the British people, you have got to re-negotiate it. We can look at whether we can give some greater certainty in terms of the referendum. I think what we need to do is to be able to show people that we will hold that referendum, we will hold that referendum after the general election."

She did not rule out introducing legislation in the current parliament to pave the way for a referendum after the next general election - despite the tensions it would create with their Liberal Democrat coalition partners. "I am not saying that's definitely what we are going to be doing," she said.

However former Tory leadership contender David Davis said the party needed to go further and hold the referendum before next year's elections to the European Parliament which are widely expected to give Ukip a platform to make further gains.

He said Mr Cameron should stop surrounding himself with fellow Old Etonians - such as Jo Johnson, the newly appointed head of the No 10 policy unit - and show that he could re-connect with the concerns of ordinary voters.

"The fact is that if we want to win the next election, we have to break this impression of being privileged and out of touch," he said in an article for The Daily Telegraph.

"The British public are neither snobs nor inverted snobs, but they do expect the Government to understand their problems and do something about it. That means more straight talking and fewer focus groups: more conventional Tory policies, not because they are Tory, but because they work: less pandering to metropolitan interest groups: and please, please, no more Old Etonian advisers."

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