Cameron to set date Saturday for British EU referendum following deal in Brussels
British Prime Minister David Cameron, fresh from what appears to be a successful renegotiation in Brussels, Belgium, of the United Kingdom's role in the European Union, said he would announce the date Saturday for a nationwide referendum on whether the UK should stay in or leave the European Union.
Cameron had promised in 2013 that he would renegotiate the terms of the UK's participation in the EU, then return to the British people to allow them the final say as to whether the UK should stay in the EU or withdraw from it.
Cameron announced he and the leaders of the EU's other 27 countries reached a deal Friday to keep Britain in the organization with "special status." He said he would present the deal to his cabinet Saturday morning.
If approved by the cabinet, the issue would go to the British people in a referendum, which could be "a once-in-a-generation moment to shape the destiny of our country," Cameron said at a news conference.
He said he would reveal the date of the referendum after the cabinet meeting.
After two days of tense talks in Brussels with other EU leaders, Cameron said the EU provided the concessions he sought, including assurances that the other nations won't try to make Britain part of a "European superstate."
"There will be tough new restrictions on access to our welfare system for EU migrants," he said. "No more something for nothing. Britain will never join the euro, and we've secured vital protections for our economy and a full say over the rules of the free trade single-market while remaining outside the euro."
World leaders praise deal
World leaders praised the deal, with German Chancellor Angela Merkel saying the EU leaders clearly wanted Britain to stay.
"We believe we have now given a package to David Cameron to elicit support in Britain for Britain remaining a member of the European Union," she said. "This was his goal after all. There was no doubt about it."
At the heart of the talks among the 28 EU heads of government were Britain's demands to play by special rules within the union. The demands left some EU leaders cold, but there was no great appetite to see a British exit from the EU -- or "Brexit," as it has come to be known.
A British departure would leave the EU diminished. It would lose its second-largest economy -- behind that of Germany -- and one of its two members who hold permanent seats on the U.N. Security Council. (France holds the other.)
Cameron was upbeat at his news conference, saying, "our plan for Europe gives us the best of both worlds."
Britain would maintain full access to the EU's free-trade market and benefit from Europe-wide cooperation on crime and terrorism, he said.
But Britain would not have to cooperate in "the parts of Europe that don't work for us," such as the euro currency and eurozone bailouts, Cameron said.
The EU sprang from the ashes of World War II as a free-trade zone. Its signal achievement has been to allow free movement of goods and people in the hope that economic integration would prevent a new continental war.
Britain opted out of both those EU provisions, and it views with skepticism the EU's effort to branch into new fields, regulating everything from pesticides to human rights, and creating a unified foreign policy, too.
Merkel said Britain's demand not to pay benefits to migrants from other EU countries had been a sticking point.
Cameron also wanted to opt out of the standard EU commitment that its members must work toward "ever closer union" -- a goal that has animated the European project for decades.
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