Trump Just Clinched a Legal Win in Brawl Over Foreign Aid
College Speaker: The Holocaust Was Not Unique
'They Crossed the Line': Tom Homan Issues Threat to Activists Who Doxed ICE...
Rachel Maddow's Very, Very, Very Special Friend
Firearms Policy Coalition Takes to Court to Argue Only Congress Can Create Laws
Guests During the First White House Tour of the New Administration Get a...
Trump Just Signed a New Executive Order on DOGE
Richard Blumenthal Claims Dan Bongino Has 'Zero Experience' to Be FBI Deputy Director
Two Airplanes at Reagan National Airport Narrowly Avoided a Collision
Legacy Media Outlets Really Ought to Calm Down Over White House's Decision on...
Trump, Vance Put the Mainstream Media in Their Place When Taking Questions at...
Shiri Bibas' Family Is Suing Al-Jazeera
Trump Encouraged by GOP Lawmakers to Recognize West Bank As Israeli Territory
Pam Bondi Dismisses Biden-Era DEI Lawsuits Involving Merit-Based Hiring of Firefighters, C...
Harmeet Dhillon Vows to Enforce the Law Against Racist DEI Practices
Tipsheet

Obama And British Establishment Join To Pressure UK Into Saving Europe From Collapse

WESTMINSTER, United Kingdom – Major UK political figures have joined with President Obama in calling on the British not to leave the European Union as it faces collapse under the weight on Islamic immigration. In the last few days both the former Foreign Secretary Lord Hague and the Mayor of London Boris Johnson have expressed fears about Britain leaving the block.

Advertisement

Hague, who claims to be a euro-sceptic, told ITN he feared Britain leaving the EU to be dangerous because of the "great economic and security challenges" facing Brussels. Boris Johnson disappointed the 'out' campaign by telling them he is not an "outer", and instead backed Britain staying in a reformed EU. They 'out' campaign had offered Johnson the leadership of their campaign.

The British have been promised a referendum on membership of the EU before the end of 2017, but the pledge was made before the current Islamic immigration crisis. At the time the Prime Minister, David Cameron, offered to renegotiate the terms of the treaty that keeps the UK in the EU in a few limited areas.

One of the areas he wanted to address was access to welfare checks by immigrants, with the British arguing that EU citizens should only be eligible to claim once they have been in the country for four years. This was designed to deter benefit tourists from Eastern Europe but is unlikely to stop an expected the wave of North African Muslims who have already flooded Germany.

So far one million Muslims have moved to the EU, mostly from Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan. The influx has led to a major spike in sexual offences in countries like Germany and Sweden.

Advertisement

At the moment the UK and Ireland do not have to accept any of these immigrants because the countries are not part of the borderless EU Shengen area. But once the new immigrants become citizens of the EU they will be allowed to relocate to the UK. The fear of this scenario is leading to a surge in support for the campaign to leave the EU.

But the campaign is fiercely opposed by the Obama White House. Last year the President told the BBC: “Having the UK in the EU gives us much greater confidence about the strength of the transatlantic union, and is part of the cornerstone of the institutions built after [the second world war] that has made the world safer and more prosperous. We want to make sure that the United Kingdom continues to have that influence.”

At the time the anti-EU Business for Britain group said: “This is a high profile intervention, but may not be the boon that ‘in’ campaigners will be hoping it is. Foreign intervention in domestic issues rarely goes down well with the public... Perhaps the president should remember his words in 2013 when he recognised there were problems with Britain’s EU membership that needed to be fixed.”

The EU has been rocked by the level of immigration and serious problems with its currency, adding the loss of the UK could spell the end of the project altogether. Martin Schulz, the socialist German president of the European Parliament, told the Daily Express he feared for the future.

Advertisement

He said: "The worst nightmare for the European project is an outbreak of populism or political upheaval in Germany. Now it is looking like a real possibility. Nobody knows what we are facing this year. We are threatened as never before.

Britain gives are $75m a day to the EU, and it easily its best performing economy. Loss of the country would leave the EU desperately short of funds just at the time it needs it most.

The last poll by YouGov show the leave camp slightly ahead with 42 percent compared to 41, but the poll was taken in December. Since then the sex attacks in Cologne and Sweden came to light.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement