Many
Labour voters don't know the party backs remaining in the EU and it could lead to a
Leave vote in the referendum, senior party figures have warned.
Former leader
Ed Miliband said the referendum result was "in question" and urged Labour supporters not to use it as a protest vote against the
Tories.
The party's top brass is warning Labour voters would be hit hardest by Brexit.
But backbenchers
John Mann and
Dennis Skinner have both rejected the official position and joined the Out campaign.
Mr
Mann said Labour voters disagreed with the party leadership on the EU issue and a "people's revolution is underway".
Labour's deputy
Tom Watson and other senior party figures said a further £18bn of spending cuts and tax rises would be in the pipeline. should the UK leave the EU.
The figure - dismissed as "fanciful" and "ridiculous" by
Vote Leave - is based on Labour's claim that a post-Brexit
Conservative government would "look to announce further austerity if they are to balance the books by the end of the
Parliament" - due to their predicted "hit to the
UK economy" of a Leave vote.
Mr
Watson said Labour was "clear that
Britain is better off in
Europe" and said that a "
Tory Brexit budget" would "hit working people hard" while Ms
Cooper said the Leave campaign was "being led by the hard right of the
Tory party" who had "never been friends to public services or low-paid workers".
But Vote Leave's
Michael Gove, said it was "pure
Project Fear" from Labour who were "trying to scare people" into voting to remain in the EU: "Many of the people who say that we will suffer economically if we're outside the EU were the same people who said we had to be inside the euro. They were wrong then, they're wrong now."
There have been reports suggesting that many Labour voters do not realise the party is in favour of remaining in the EU.
BBC political editor
Laura Kuenssberg said several senior figures had told her they were genuinely worried that many Labour voters would vote to leave the EU.
Mr Watson said the "
Labour Party is about as united as it possibly can be in asking people to
Remain" but added: "
The one thing that does concern me is that the polls seem to say that about 40% of Labour supporters don't yet know our position
... There are two weeks to go, we need to get that message out."
He welcomed Labour MP
Khalid Mahmood, who has previously backed the Leave campaign, but has now switched to Remain.
Shadow Business Secretary Angela Eagle urged Labour voters not to use the 23 June referendum to give the Remain-supporting Conservative government a "bloody nose" while former party leader Ed Miliband said: "This is not a referendum on
David Cameron".
Speaking to
BBC Radio 4's
Today programme, Mr Miliband said the outcome of the referendum was "in question" adding: "That's why the Labour message has got to be heard, and I think so far not enough of our voters have heard that we are for in, and for Remain."
He added: "We haven't done enough yet, we've got to do more. But people know where Labour stands."
Shadow home secretary Andy Burnham told BBC Two's
Newsnight: "We have definitely been far too much
Hampstead and not enough
Hull in recent times and we need to change that. Here we are two weeks away from the very real prospect that Britain will vote for isolation."
But Mr Mann, MP for
Bassetlaw, in
Nottinghamshire, told the BBC on Friday: "
It's not that Labour's not getting its message across, it's that Labour voters are fundamentally disagreeing."
Single market row
And former
Labour minister Frank Field, who is also campaigning for a Leave vote, warned that the party risked losing votes to
UKIP with its Remain stance. He said the party should be encouraging supporters to vote "as they believe is in the best interests of our country" instead.
"In trying to scare Labour voters to back Remain, our leadership is on course to lose another one million votes to UKIP, just as we did in
2015," said Mr
Field.
In a separate development,
Germany's finance minister
Wolfgang Schauble told
German newspaper Der Spiegel that Britain could not have the benefits of the single market without being an EU member.
"That won't work," Mr
Schauble told the newspaper. "It would require the country to abide by the rules of a club from which it currently wants to withdraw."
Remain campaigner
Lord Mandelson said Mr Schauble intervention "finally knocks on the head" one of the Leave campaigns main claims.
But Vote Leave chief executive
Matthew Elliott said there was "no question" that Britain would still have access to the single market after Brexit, adding: "It would be perverse of the eurozone to try to create artificial barriers - and would do far more damage to them than to anyone else."
- published: 10 Jun 2016
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