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David Cameron urges older voters to back Remain

Drawing applause from the audience, he said “desperate” refugees pose no risk to Britain compared to the threat posed by the “hatred” put on them by the likes of Mr Farage.

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In a testimony to the parliament of the EU, Mario Draghi said Tuesday that the European Central Bank is “ready to act by using all the instruments available within our mandate”.

David Cameron was accused of “scaremongering” on TV after repeating his claim that the terrorists of Islamic State would be pleased to see Britain leave the EU. We should stay in order to try and improve but does that change my views on points I’ve raised on public ownership of railways and things like that? Of course, we need to do better with India; we need a trade deal with India.

“I do not think Britain, at the end, is a quitter”.

Nigel Farage, head of the anti-EU UK Independence Party, revealed a new poster showing a traffic snarl with the headline: “The school over-run”.

Public opinion polls suggested a slight shift toward remaining in the European Union, but the two sides remained essentially even and it was unclear what was behind any movement, said respected pollster Ben Page of Ipsos MORI.

There have been nearly weekly newspaper reports about leadership coups in the event of an out vote, while polls suggest most Britons want Cameron to resign if he loses. Betting market Betfair said the probability of “remain” has risen to 72 percent, from Friday’s 65 percent.

Mr Hilton said the premier reaffirmed his commitment to target in the 2015 general election even though he “had been told was undeliverable”.

“You don’t gain money by leaving the EU”.

“Remaining will allow the United Kingdom to retain the influence on which the unique and successful United Kingdom automotive sector depends”, said SMMT chief executive Mike Hawes.

“Personally, I think it’s possible it could be quite a lot worse than that”, he told ITV’s Peston On Sunday.

As the campaign has taken on an increasingly anti-establishment, anti-elite tone, the polished authority of Cameron, supported by big hitters from US President Barack Obama to the International Monetary Fund, has struggled to cut through.

“I don’t want anyone to vote in this referendum on the basis of Turkey joining because it is not going to happen, just like the European army is not going to happen, just like the £350 million isn’t true”, he said.

Britain’s anti-EU campaigners have always been bitterly divided but the squabbles appear to be intensifying as Thursday’s referendum draws near.

As polls show support shifting away from Brexit ahead of Thursday’s referendum, divisions have emerged within the Leave campaign over its signature issue of immigration.

He said: “The single market isn’t a nirvana, it’s a mirage. Reduce the cost of food products we can’t produce in the United Kingdom because at the moment the European Union puts tariffs up to the rest of the world which we have to pay for”.

Both Remain and Leave campaigns resumed over the weekend after a two-day pause following the killing.

“Cameron is panicked, it’s out of his hands now”, Arron Banks, a multi-millionaire insurance tycoon who is funding one of the Leave campaigns, said on Twitter.

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Andrew Murrison, a Conservative lawmaker and former defence minister, said in a tweet that he later deleted: “Remain side spinning Jo Cox murder for partisan advantage in #EUReferendum shameful”.

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