The UK's withdrawal
from the European Union (EU) would be a "disaster", a European
commissioner has said.
Asked whether it would
be a "disaster" if the UK voted to quit the EU, she replied:
"Yes. For us and for you." MS Malmstroem is in London to brief
ministers on the progress of EU-US trade talks.
The Conservative party
has promised to hold an in-out referendum on the UK's continuing membership of
the EU if it wins this year's general election.
The referendum would
only be held after David Cameron, if he is still prime minister after May, has
attempted to renegotiate the terms of the UK's membership of the EU.
Ms. Malmstroem's
admission was unusually frank for an EU commissioner, observers say. In the
past, European officials, as well as other European heads of state, have simply
said the decision is a matter for the British people.
Trade deal
Known as TTIP - the
Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership - the EU-US trade deal would
create the largest free-trade area in the world.
The British government
maintains TTIP could add £10bn to the UK economy, £80bn to the US and £100bn to
the EU every year.
It says shoppers would
benefit by the removal of EU import tariffs on popular goods, such as jeans and
cars. The government also argues that reducing regulation would help UK
businesses export to the US, with small businesses in particular predicted to
benefit.
At Monday's meeting,
Business Secretary Vince Cable and UK Trade Minister Lord Livingston were due
to ask Ms. Malmstroem to give senior UK parliamentarians access to the TTIP
treaty text, in order to allow them to monitor progress and ask questions on
the public's behalf.
Several concerns have
been raised about the treaty, including its potential impact on the National
Health Service (NHS), which opponents in the UK say could lead to health
services being privatized.
British interests
Mr Cable said he
disliked "the level of secrecy that has surrounded the transatlantic trade
deal so far" and could understand why some people were worried about the
deal.
He added: "I will
be working to ensure all British interests are protected and that the deal can
be properly scrutinized."
"We must also
clearly demonstrate that the NHS and our public services are protected as a
priority. The EU has recently given us very strong assurances that TTIP would
not in any way endanger them. I want to see that reflected in the treaty
drafting."
But trade union Unite
said that legal advice it had received from an expert in EU law and healthcare
services suggested there were "clear dangers" arising from TTIP that
would affect the NHS.
Unite general
secretary Len McCluskey said there was "a clear risk of irreversible privatization",
because the trade deal would give US corporations or investors the right to sue
the government if it ever tried to take back services into public ownership.
A government
spokesperson said that TTIP posed no threat to the NHS whatsoever. "Recent
scaremongering suggesting TTIP could somehow force future governments to
privatise public services is simply untrue and deeply irresponsible," the
spokesperson said.
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