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Neil Kinnock in ‘Brexit by default’ warning

But the Justice Secretary insisted the bodies had been “wrong in the past” about major economic issues and that he preferred to have the support of businessmen.

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Mortgages are set to rocket by almost £1,000 a year if Britain quits the European Union, David Cameron has warned.

And partly, I think, it’s very simply this: Gove and the Brexit camp have all the arguments on their side, Remain have only bluster, appeals to authority, and rhetorical trickery. Margaret Thatcher said about economists, the great thing is that economists are fine but you mustn’t inhale.

He said: “No the truth is that of course people want to speculate about personalities but this is far more important than that”. Liam Fox, a former Conservative defense secretary, expressed disdain at Merkel’s “veiled threats.” asking, “When will they understand we will not be bullied into staying?”

Mr Gove told voters to “take back control” from the European Union “elites” in a televised question-and-answer. Some 32% believed it would not, while 7% did not know.

“That means there will be less money – not more”, he added.

The key objectives of the Leave case can be summarised as: • Replacement of an ineffective immigration system by a safer and fairer system which is based on skill needs and applies to all applicants, which also allows us to take full control of who enters and who we can remove from our country.

The warning came after Prime Minister David Cameron said a Leave vote would be an act of “economic self-harm” which would hit growth and jobs. “And we’re going to win this one, just you see”. “I’ll give you half a point for Donald Trump”, Sky’s Faisal Islam said.

Asked whether he would consider leading the party when Mr Cameron steps down in the future, Mr Gove immediately ruled himself out of the leadership race.

No politician kills with kindness more viciously than Gove. He called the Prime Minister “Dishonest Dave” in a Telegraph interview ahead of a live TV clash between the pair on Tuesday. “Their wages are lower, access to public services”.

At the rally, Mr Gove was greeted by cheering and chants of “Gove, Gove” from supporters.

He said the Vote Leave argument that Britain could flourish outside the European Union was “simply mistaken” and was based on “pretty bad economics”.

“As the eurozone crisis deepens we may be forced to contribute to new bail-outs”, the letter to Mr Osborne and Mr Cameron says. That rebate can be whittled away. Immigration is now one of the main issues being discussed ahead of the vote. But Gove remains largely unfazed – and by the end has clearly made a better impression on the studio audience than Cameron manages. “I’ve always believed in having the big players on the pitch”, he said.

In the past two years, Brussels has hit Britain with unexpected bills, requiring the United Kingdom to pump more than £1billion extra into the EU’s coffers, even though Mr Osborne promised he would refuse to pay.

He told viewers: “I can tell you I’m absolutely not”. He said: “Do not skate over their misery”.

Cameron attacked Tory colleagues Michael Gove and Boris Johnson for “writing cheques they know will bounce” after they claimed Brexit would free up an extra £100m a week for the NHS.

Finally, JP Morgan Chief Executive Jamie Dimon has warned that a “Brexit” would likely necessitate job cuts in his company.

He said he did not want to mimic former Labour leader Ed Miliband, who nearly fell off the stage at a televised event during last year’s General Election campaign.

Mr Gove said: “I’m not interested in defending the position of those who already have money, power and privilege”.

“China would lose a big supporter of free trade in the European Union if Britain were not there”.

The latest Guardian/ICM polls revealed that 52 percent of those polled favor Brexit (British exit from the EU), while only 48 percent want to stay in.

Leave campaigners have pledged to launch immediate trade negotiations that would create an employment boost if voters back Brexit in the June 23 referendum on membership of the bloc.

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“I think instead of the pessimism of the Remain campaign we have an opportunity to think of the next generation”, he said.

Michael Gove is in the Brexit camp