LONDON — Prime Minister David Cameron on Friday raised the prospect of Britain leaving the European Union unless fellow leaders agree to let him restrict access to welfare payments for immigrants.
In a speech in central England, Cameron demanded that Europeans arriving in Britain receive no welfare payments or state housing until they've been residents for four years. He said they should have a job offer before they get to Britain, shouldn't receive unemployment benefits and should be removed if they don't find work within six months.
It's the second time Cameron has been forced to make a speech in an attempt to counter the rise of the anti-E.U. Independence Party. In 2013, he promised a renegotiation of Britain's E.U. membership and then a referendum on leaving. With the Independence Party gaining ground and now holding two seats in Parliament, Cameron said that immigration, the focus of its campaigns will be a "key part" of that negotiation.
"If I succeed, I will, as I have said, campaign to keep this country in a reformed E.U.," he said. "If our concerns fall on deaf ears and we cannot put our relationship with the E.U. on a better footing, then of course I rule nothing out."
The speech reaffirmed Cameron's target for net immigration, first set out before the 2010 election, to reduce it to "tens of thousands" a year. That pledge, repeated in 2011, has undermined Cameron's credibility as the number of immigrants has risen.
Home Secretary Theresa May said this week the goal is "unlikely" to be met. Cameron described it Friday as an "ambition" and said the government would set out further, more detailed metrics, so people could see the origins of immigrants.
Newcomer numbers surge
Net migration to the United Kingdom surged 43 percent in the 12 months ending in June, with the number of long-term arrivals exceeding those leaving by 260,000, the Office for National Statistics said. Immigration from other E.U. nations was at a record high.
The failure to cut the number of newcomers has damaged Cameron's Conservative Party. Immigration overtook the economy this year as the most-mentioned subject in a poll of issues facing Britain.