As a centre-left softie, I think I should, quite naturally, fall with the 'in' crowd. I've always considered the 'outters' as being a ragbag group of right-wing scaremongers and idiots if I'm being totally honest. However I'm been doing a lot of reading on the subject and I think I'm now 55% in the 'out' camp. Allow me to explain my reasons:
The 'deal' that Cameron has negotiated isn't worth the paper it's written on. Many, many people would be more than happy to stick with the EU if we could manage our own laws and control our own migration, while keeping good, strong, trading relationship with the EU - and I honestly thought a reformed Europe could achieve this. Unfortunately it doesn't look like an 'in' vote will change anything. It'll still allow the EU to make key decisions on our future, decisions which we should be making ourselves. I want migration when it's filling skill-gaps and helping our country and growing our economy, not an open door to five-hundred million EU nationals who can come and go at will. Can we really justify the £350 million a week that goes to Brussels? Could that not be better spent on internships and apprenticeships here in the UK?
And this 'red card' veto isn't a veto at all, it'll just mean we can bring something in for debate. If history has taught us anything it's that the EU will ignore our concerns and carry on regardless.
I think it's unfair to say the 'out' camp are just using the politics of fear. There's some very good points being made, points which the 'in' camp can't answer.
I'm very open-minded on this, and willing to be convinced either way, but right now the 'out' camp are making far more sense.
What points can't the in camp answer? Also it is not nearly 350m a week.
Mythbusting: Does the EU cost Britain £55m a day?
Many Eurosceptics rage against the UK’s annual £18bn transfer to the EU. Nigel Farage, leader of the pro-Brexit UK Independence party, has claimed that being in the bloc costs Britain £55m a day — which adds up to more than £20bn a year.
But the UK’s net transfer to the EU falls far short of such claims. A rebate secured by Margaret Thatcher in 1984 emphatically reduced the bill from the headline figure. London sent £13bn to Brussels last year. Against that, the UK received £4.5bn from the EU in regional aid and agricultural subsidies, and the private sector received a further £1.4bn direct from the EU budget.
That takes the net cost of membership to about £7bn, less than half a per cent of national income — about £260 a year for each British household.
Another often-quoted figure — the reported £33bn cost of regulation — comes from an impact assessment by Open Europe, a think-tank, of 100 EU rules. But it is based on only one side of the balance sheet. Even though he does not like many of these regulations, Raoul Ruparel, the think-tank’s co-director, says the benefits of the regulations are “much higher” than the costs and “clearly not all of [the costs] would disappear after Brexit”.
https://next.ft.com/content/202a60c0-cfd8-11e5-831d-09f7778e7377