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British PM faces first live TV debate on Brexit referendum
“I was making a comment on a specific proposal he had which was to ban Muslims from entering the United States”, Cameron said.
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Goading him slightly, the Tory minister, said: “Oh so were you not telling the truth yesterday?” The Prime Minister had endured an uncomfortable evening, facing interruptions and heckles from a hostile studio audience.
“And you’re trying to avoid talking about economics”.
“They are organisations, I’m afraid, that didn’t predict the global crash in 2008 and the same organisations in many cases who said we should be inside the single currency”, he said.
The audience, made up of an equal number of remain, out and don’t knows, started clapping at the comical exchange between the two.
He added: “I am angry at the way the British people are being misled, this is much more important than a general election, this is going to affect people, their livelihoods, their future, for a very long time to come and if they are given honest straightforward facts and they decide to leave, then that is the decision the British people take”.
Ladbrokes is now offering odds of 5/2 for a Brexit (28%) while Number Cruncher Politics’ live referendum forecast is indicating that the probability of Britain voting to leave is just 22%. So you would get a race to the bottom.
On Thursday, the boss of one of the biggest, Tim Roache of the GMB, said Labour needed to be “a bit more bold. a bit more courageous, in taking on the issues in working people’s minds, rather than keeping silent about them”.
In his interview with Islam he admitted that at times he found the European Union “immensely frustrating”, but said the United Kingdom would “absolutely not” be better off outside the bloc. Faisal Islam constantly interrupts Gove.
But others decided Mr Gove was just buckling under the pressure. But the truth is that we can not count on that rebate.
But Mr Johnson, the Justice Secretary and Labour’s Gisela Stuart branded Treasury analysis previously released by the government predicting Brexit would hit households by more than £4,000 as “indefensible” and “bogus”.
Leave campaigners say the rebate is not guaranteed and puts control of the money in the hands of Brussels rather than Westminster.
Britain Stronger In, which is supported by Mr Cameron, said the average new mortgage will cost £920 a year.
Mr Johnson dismissed Sir John’s stinging assessment, insisting it was “not true” that the Leave’s claims about Britain sending £350 million a week to Brussels was “fictitious” or the campaign was “squalid”.
Cameron pressed his campaign to remain in the bloc in a live television performance yesterday.
The insurers’ joint paper said at least six of the IUA’s 46 members, which are predominantly non-British companies, would reconsider the legal status of their London operations if there is a Brexit.
But he will warn that polling suggests a large number of Labour supporters may stay at home, while numerous skilled workers who make up much of the party’s core support are thought to be considering voting Leave.
But the Leave campaign says that voters “cannot trust” the government on the European Union, and has previously rubbished government predictions that Brexit will hit households by more than £4,000 as “indefensible” and “bogus”.
The Leave campaign, led by two one-time allies of the prime minister, says Britain can not control migration while being a member of the European Union, which holds up free movement of people as one of its founding principles.
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The campaign’s promise to introduce a points-based immigration system and Value-Added Tax on household energy bills have also been detailed.