Pressure on Cameron

Before the vote last night I emailed my Tory constituency MP and highlighted the lack of “moral clarity” that a vote against the EU referendum represented. I told her that denying the people a vote on how decisions are made about their lives represented the most fundamental attack on liberty that you could choose to undertake and that voting down this motion represented a “violation of volition on a massive scale”. I doubt many readers have trouble decoding that allusion, and indeed rebellion on an impressive scale is what happened. Cameron has been left standing at the end if this battle but as MP David Nuttal said to City AM, he has not won the war. Far from it.

In fact this will put pressure on Cameron to appease his eurosceptic faction so that they don’t, as Allister Heath predicts, become an anti-Cameron faction. Progress (or regression?) on Europe is dear to the hearts of this faction and they won’t give in lightly. Apparently he’s already repeated that he wants to repatriate powers, which is a step in the right direction. Maybe he’ll finally get on with it.

One response to “Pressure on Cameron”

  1. “Apparently he’s already repeated that he wants to repatriate powers, which is a step in the right direction.”

    How does he square that with Clegg’s position today that we won’t repatriate power and money from the EU?

    Even if Cameron is honest in his heart about this, his problem is that many of us just won’t believe him. By the time he’s in a position to make even some watered-down gesture on the matter, it might be too late. I can’t foresee a second term for him, which rather makes the actions of so many ‘loyal’ Conservative MPs last night futile.

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