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Theresa May says the UK must 'stand tall' as EU member Theresa May says the UK must 'stand tall' as EU member
(about 4 hours later)
Home Secretary Theresa May has said the UK has to "stand tall and lead in Europe" rather than leaving the EU.Home Secretary Theresa May has said the UK has to "stand tall and lead in Europe" rather than leaving the EU.
In her first speech of the campaign, Mrs May said the UK had "forgotten how to lead" in Europe and must re-assert itself to force change from within. Mrs May said membership made the UK "more secure from crime and terrorism".
Membership made the UK "more secure from crime and terrorism", she argued. She also raised concerns about more countries joining the EU and said the UK should withdraw from the European Convention on Human Rights.
The UK could veto Turkey joining the EU, she added, after Vote Leave's Michael Gove warned of an immigration free-for-all if the UK stayed in. Ex-cabinet minister and Leave campaigner Iain Duncan Smith said her "remarkable intervention" had "utterly undermined" the government's position.
Mr Gove, justice secretary, warned that five potential new members of the EU - Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, Albania and Turkey - would result in millions more people having the right to move to the UK. Mrs May's first major speech of the EU referendum campaign came after pro-Leave Justice Secretary Michael Gove warned that five potential new members of the EU - Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, Albania and Turkey - would result in millions more people having the right to move to the UK.
The home secretary said Albania, Serbia and Turkey had "poor populations and serious problems with organised crime, corruption, and sometimes even terrorism".
She added: "We have to ask ourselves, is it really right that the EU should just continue to expand, conferring upon all new member states all the rights of membership?"
Mrs May said the UK had "forgotten how to lead" in Europe and must re-assert itself to force change from within, adding that it could veto Turkey joining the EU.
In her speech - and during a question and answer session - Mrs May admitted that being in the EU made it harder to control the "volume of immigration". But she said the UK was able to control its border by blocking entry to terrorists.In her speech - and during a question and answer session - Mrs May admitted that being in the EU made it harder to control the "volume of immigration". But she said the UK was able to control its border by blocking entry to terrorists.
She praised David Cameron's leadership in trying to seek a better deal for the UK, but said the UK's collective posture was too often to "blame Europe" for its problems and the UK "has to have more confidence to get things done" rather than "shouting from the sidelines".She praised David Cameron's leadership in trying to seek a better deal for the UK, but said the UK's collective posture was too often to "blame Europe" for its problems and the UK "has to have more confidence to get things done" rather than "shouting from the sidelines".
Mrs May said the issue the British public faced on 23 June was how the UK "maximised" its "prosperity, security, influence and sovereignty".Mrs May said the issue the British public faced on 23 June was how the UK "maximised" its "prosperity, security, influence and sovereignty".
In a speech, which she said was an analysis of "the risks and opportunities" of EU membership rather than an attack on Leave campaigners, she said the post-war order had seen the UK and other countries "cede sovereignty in a controlled way" by co-operating to prevent a greater loss of sovereignty through military conflict or economic decline. In what she said was an analysis of "the risks and opportunities" of EU membership rather than an attack on Leave campaigners, she said the post-war order had seen the UK and other countries "cede sovereignty in a controlled way" by co-operating to prevent a greater loss of sovereignty through military conflict or economic decline.
National interestNational interest
Mrs May said the question was not whether the UK could "survive" outside the EU given that it was the world's fifth largest economy which had "friendships and alliances across the world" - but whether the UK was "better off in or out".Mrs May said the question was not whether the UK could "survive" outside the EU given that it was the world's fifth largest economy which had "friendships and alliances across the world" - but whether the UK was "better off in or out".
While "the sky would not fall" in the event of Brexit, she said she had concluded it was a matter of "hard-headed national interest" to remain in, based on security, trade and prosperity.While "the sky would not fall" in the event of Brexit, she said she had concluded it was a matter of "hard-headed national interest" to remain in, based on security, trade and prosperity.
"Remaining in the EU does make the UK more secure, prosperous and influential beyond our shores," she said.
She warned that leaving the EU could threaten the future of the United Kingdom - which she said was "at risk of dismemberment" by another Scottish independence referendum - and lead the US to search for "another strategic partner" within the EU.
On security, she said EU membership enabled the UK to access EU-wide information, such as criminal records, to allow the UK to turn away serious criminals and terrorists at the border, fast-track the extradition of offenders and simplify the deportation of prisoners.On security, she said EU membership enabled the UK to access EU-wide information, such as criminal records, to allow the UK to turn away serious criminals and terrorists at the border, fast-track the extradition of offenders and simplify the deportation of prisoners.
The UK had extensive intelligence-sharing with the US and other allies outside the EU, she said but being excluded from the EU-wide information sharing would make the UK "less safe".The UK had extensive intelligence-sharing with the US and other allies outside the EU, she said but being excluded from the EU-wide information sharing would make the UK "less safe".
EU changesEU changes
However, she called for major changes to the way the UK did business in the EU, saying its attitude too often resembled a "defensive crouch".However, she called for major changes to the way the UK did business in the EU, saying its attitude too often resembled a "defensive crouch".
She said she wanted to see the power of the European Parliament and the European Court of Justice reduced and she also signalled her opposition to further enlargement by admitting countries like Serbia and Albania. She said she wanted to see the power of the European Parliament and the European Court of Justice reduced.
Regardless of the outcome of the referendum, she said she still believed the UK should leave the European Convention of Human Rights - saying it binds the hands of Parliament and adds "nothing to our prosperity". And regardless of the outcome of the referendum, she said she still believed the UK should leave the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) - saying it binds the hands of Parliament and adds "nothing to our prosperity".
Pro-Brexit campaigners have attempted to return the EU debate to the issue of immigration after President Obama warned that the UK would be at the "back of the queue" for trade deals with the US, if it voted to leave the EU on 23 June. It was the ECHR, not the EU, that was responsible for controversial human rights decision affecting the UK, she said.
Justice Secretary Michael Gove warned that five potential new members of the EU - Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, Albania and Turkey - would result in millions more people having the right to move to the UK. The ECHR, which is separate to the EU institutions, was brought into UK law by the Human Rights Act.
"Because we cannot control our borders - and because our deal sadly does nothing to change this fact - public services such as the NHS will face an unquantifiable strain as millions more become EU citizens," he wrote in the Times. The Conservatives have pledged to replace the Human Rights Act with a "British Bill of Rights" but have not proposed leaving the convention altogether.
"There is a direct and serious threat to our public services, standard of living and ability to maintain social solidarity if we accept continued EU membership," he added. 'Out of control'
'Immediate threat' Mr Duncan Smith told the BBC the home secretary's comments on the ECHR and EU expansion had "thrown the gauntlet down" to the government.
Former Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith, another leading Leave campaigner, said immigration was "out of control" and free movement of people rules meant the UK had to accept criminals coming into the country. On EU expansion, he claimed, the prime minister is "in favour of extending our borders to Syria" by allowing Turkey to join the EU.
"She actually basically questions the very campaign she says that she supports," he said.
"This is a remarkable intervention. She has really thrown the gauntlet down and undermines the whole of the 'vote stay in' campaign."
Mr Duncan Smith said immigration was "out of control" and free movement of people rules meant the UK had to accept criminals coming into the country.
"An elected government in the UK elected on a platform to reduce immigration right now cannot deliver that because the EU is an open border," he told Radio 4's Today."An elected government in the UK elected on a platform to reduce immigration right now cannot deliver that because the EU is an open border," he told Radio 4's Today.
"You cannot reject anyone unless you can demonstrate categorically that they pose an immediate threat to the life and livelihood of the UK.""You cannot reject anyone unless you can demonstrate categorically that they pose an immediate threat to the life and livelihood of the UK."
Pro-Brexit campaigners have attempted to return the EU debate to the issue of immigration after President Obama warned that the UK would be at the "back of the queue" for trade deals with the US, if it voted to leave the EU on 23 June.
His intervention has been seen as a major boost for the Remain campaign.
Speaking on Monday, Boris Johnson said the EU had vetoed "modest" restrictions to free movement rules, such as requiring anyone coming to the UK to work to have a firm job offer.