Ed Miliband has set out his case for why the UK should stay in the EU, in his first major intervention in the referendum debate.
The former
Labour leader argued that social justice and progressive change can only be achieved by staying in a reformed EU.
And he accused
Leave campaigners of wanting a "free-market, low-regulated, race-to-the-bottom offshore
Britain".
Those campaigning to leave the EU say the UK would be stronger outside it.
MP
John Redwood, a vice president of pro-exit
Conservatives for Britain, argued on Tuesday that the UK would be able to end austerity if it left because it could reinvest the money it spends on EU contributions into the
NHS and the economy.
He said the government would have "£10bn" to play with in a post-exit first
Budget, with the remaining "£9bn" used to guarantee current EU funding to farmers, universities and for research grants.
The referendum on Britain's membership of the EU takes place on 23 June.
Mr Miliband - who stepped down as leader following
Labour's general election defeat - made his remarks in a speech at a
Labour In for Britain event on Tuesday.
He appealed to voters who backed Labour last May to vote to remain, and warned that the party must not "sit out" the debate.
"I want to send a very clear message to the nine million people who voted Labour at the last election:
I believe the change you voted for, and still want to see in Britain, can only be achieved by us remaining in the
European Union," he will say.
"
And I believe that leaving would irreparably set back the cause of Labour politics."
'Pessimistic agenda'
Mr Miliband also warned that the upcoming referendum was "too important" to be obscured by the infighting in the "divided"
Conservative Party.
"
The civil war in the Conservative Party cannot and must not obscure the central question in this referendum: are we more likely to secure social justice and progressive change inside the EU or outside?
"
The answer is resoundingly that we should vote to remain," he will say.
He said it is "simply a fantasy" to suggest the UK could confront "the great causes of the
21st century" outside the EU.
Leave campaigners such as
Iain Duncan Smith,
Boris Johnson and
Nigel Farage believe "low tax, low regulation is the way we succeed", he will say.
"It is not my vision, it is not your vision and I believe it is not the vision of Labour voters either. If Britain left the European Union, it would not serve a progressive, optimistic agenda.
"It would only serve a reactionary, pessimistic agenda."
The vast majority of Labour's 231 MPs support continued
EU membership but
Jeremy Corbyn, regarded as the most Eurosceptic leader for 30 years, has so far played a low-key role in the campaign.
MPs on the left of the party have set up a separate campaign group to articulate a more radical vision of the
EU's future and the
UK's participation, focused on promoting a "social
Europe".
Economic impact
Labour Leave is currently backed by half a dozen MPs although the group has said this total will rise as the campaign goes on.
The group, which is affiliated to the anti-EU campaign group
Vote Leave, argues the UK is being held back by a stagnating and wasteful EU, with workers bearing the brunt of austerity measures designed to prop up the euro.
It recently announced that former minister
Tom Harris would spearhead its campaign in
Scotland.
Mr Miliband's comments come as credit agency
Moody's predicted the
UK economy would be hit by leaving the EU, but the impact would be "small" and unlikely to lead to big job losses.
Mr
Duncan Smith has said leaving the EU would be a "stride into the light", enabling the UK to trade freely and control migration.
Mr Johnson recently argued that leaving the EU would be a "win-win", saying the union "costs us a huge amount of money and subverts our democracy".
And Mr
Farage said last month that the 23 June referendum could be "independence day" if the UK voted to leave the EU, citing concerns about mass migration and that "as
EU members there is nothing we can do about it".
- published: 22 Mar 2016
- views: 0