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EU referendum: Gove and Johnson challenge PM on immigration EU referendum: Gove and Johnson challenge PM on immigration
(about 1 hour later)
David Cameron must accept the failure of the government's manifesto pledge to reduce migration into the UK, two leading Vote Leave MPs have said.David Cameron must accept the failure of the government's manifesto pledge to reduce migration into the UK, two leading Vote Leave MPs have said.
Michael Gove and Boris Johnson said the pledge was "corrosive of public trust" while Britain remained in the EU.Michael Gove and Boris Johnson said the pledge was "corrosive of public trust" while Britain remained in the EU.
But Number 10 said their claim was an "attempt to distract" from the fact that a Brexit would be "disastrous". But Number 10 said their claim was an "attempt to distract" from the fact that an EU exit would be "disastrous".
It comes as a survey suggests that nine in 10 of the UK's top economists say leaving the EU would be damaging. It comes amid growing Tory turmoil over the EU, with some MPs threatening a post-referendum leadership challenge.
Meanwhile, a survey has suggested that nine in 10 of the UK's top economists say leaving the EU would be damaging.
There are less than four weeks to go until the UK decides whether to stay in or leave the European Union, in a referendum on 23 June.
Escalation of Tory division over EuropeEscalation of Tory division over Europe
The UK's EU referendum: All you need to knowThe UK's EU referendum: All you need to know
EU referendum issues guide: Explore the argumentsEU referendum issues guide: Explore the arguments
Net migration - the difference between the number of people coming to the UK for at least a year and those leaving - rose to 333,000 in 2015, according to Office for National Statistics estimates. The government is aiming to cut this figure to under 100,000. Immigration is one of the key battlegrounds in the referendum debate - and it is the focus of an open letter to Mr Cameron, published in the Sunday Times, by Mr Gove and Mr Johnson, who say the government's pledge to get migration below 100,000 was unachievable.
Net migration - the difference between the number of people coming to the UK for at least a year and those leaving - rose to 333,000 in 2015, according to Office for National Statistics estimates.
The figure for EU-only net migration was 184,000, equalling its record high, and 188,000 for non-EU.The figure for EU-only net migration was 184,000, equalling its record high, and 188,000 for non-EU.
In an open letter to Mr Cameron, published in the Sunday Times, Mr Gove and Mr Johnson said the migration pledge had become unachievable. Mr Johnson and Mr Gove said: "Voters were promised repeatedly at elections that net migration could be cut to tens of thousands.
They said: "Voters were promised repeatedly at elections that net migration could be cut to tens of thousands.
"This promise is plainly not achievable as long as the UK is a member of the EU and the failure to keep it is corrosive of public trust in politics.""This promise is plainly not achievable as long as the UK is a member of the EU and the failure to keep it is corrosive of public trust in politics."
They also said they were "particularly concerned about the impact of free movement in the future on public services".They also said they were "particularly concerned about the impact of free movement in the future on public services".
"Class sizes will raise and waiting lists will lengthen if we don't tackle free movement," they wrote."Class sizes will raise and waiting lists will lengthen if we don't tackle free movement," they wrote.
Meanwhile, Conservative backbencher and Leave campaigner Andrew Bridgen told 5 live's Pienaar's Politics that as many as 50 Tory MPs were ready to back a vote of no-confidence in the prime minister. In response to the letter, Number 10 said: "This is a transparent attempt to distract from the fact that the overwhelming majority of economists and businesses believe leaving the single market would be disastrous for jobs, prices and opportunities for people."
"If there's a small Remain vote... I think there probably would be 50 colleagues who'd be very dissatisfied with the prime minister's performance," he said.
Leave campaigner and former Conservative Defence Secretary Liam Fox told the BBC's Andrew Marr he did not know if that was true but the EU referendum should not be turned into an internal Tory party debate.
He said he was sure Mr Cameron wanted restrictions on free movement and it was "impossible when planning public services to deal with those sort of numbers" of net migrants.
AnalysisAnalysis
By John Pienaar, deputy political editorBy John Pienaar, deputy political editor
The Brexiteers point is that EU open borders make immigration control impossible.The Brexiteers point is that EU open borders make immigration control impossible.
Its effect, though, is to accelerate a descent into internecine warfare which now threatens to make the Conservatives ungovernable if the referendum ends in anything but a decisive victory for the Remain campaign.Its effect, though, is to accelerate a descent into internecine warfare which now threatens to make the Conservatives ungovernable if the referendum ends in anything but a decisive victory for the Remain campaign.
So bitter has the conflict become, so taut the tension between the rival factions, that angry Eurosceptic Tories talk privately of challenging the prime minister's position even if Britain votes to stay inside the European Union.So bitter has the conflict become, so taut the tension between the rival factions, that angry Eurosceptic Tories talk privately of challenging the prime minister's position even if Britain votes to stay inside the European Union.
Escalation of Tory divisionEscalation of Tory division
In response to the letter, Number 10 said: "This is a transparent attempt to distract from the fact that the overwhelming majority of economists and businesses believe leaving the single market would be disastrous for jobs, prices and opportunities for people." The row over the migration target comes as the Conservative infighting over the EU referendum intensifies.
Nine in 10 of the UK's top economists agree that leaving the EU would damage the country's economy, according to a survey published in the Observer. David Cameron and most of his cabinet are campaigning for a vote to stay in the EU, but about half of his MPs support an exit.
According to an Ipsos Mori poll of more than 600 economists, 88% of those who replied said leaving the EU single market would damage Britain's growth prospects over the next five years. Conservative Leave campaigner Andrew Bridgen told 5 live's Pienaar's Politics that as many as 50 Tory MPs were ready to back a vote of no-confidence in the prime minister over his handling over the debate.
Britain Stronger in Europe campaign director Will Straw said: "This is the final nail in the coffin of the Leave campaign's economic credibility. "If there's a small Remain vote... I think there probably would be 50 colleagues who'd be very dissatisfied with the prime minister's performance," the MP said.
"It is becoming clear that leaving is a risk we simply cannot afford to take." One MP, Nadine Dorries, said she had already sent a letter to Graham Brady, chairman of the 1922 committee of Tory MPs, calling for a vote of no confidence in Mr Cameron if Remain narrowly won.
A vote to leave the EU would cause "an immediate shock to our economy", former Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair told the BBC. Speaking on ITV's Peston on Sunday, she accused David Cameron of "outright lies" over the EU and said trust in him and George Osborne, the pro-Remain chancellor, "has been absolutely shattered".
It would "create years of uncertainty because we will then have to renegotiate all the complicated trading arrangements we have with the rest of Europe", he told Andrew Marr. But former cabinet ministers Liam Fox and Iain Duncan Smith - both on the Leave side - played down the prospect of a coup, and insisted they would want Mr Cameron to stay on as leader.
"That isn't some hypothetical risk, it is something you will see directly in people's jobs, in people's living standards, in businesses' ability to work with confidence," he said. Speaking on the BBC's Andrew Marr show Mr Fox said the referendum should not be turned into an internal Tory party debate.
"It's an enormous political problem." Also on Marr, former Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair, who backs Remain, warned that leaving the EU would not solve migration problems.
And, he said, leaving the EU would not solve migration problems.
"If you actually break down the figures on EU migration, many of these people come in on short-term contracts, and then will go back out again. Many of these people work in vital public services."If you actually break down the figures on EU migration, many of these people come in on short-term contracts, and then will go back out again. Many of these people work in vital public services.
"And we also get the benefit. The reason we can travel around Europe, without restrictions, is because of the freedom of movement of people." "And we also get the benefit. The reason we can travel around Europe, without restrictions, is because of the freedom of movement of people," he said.
Elsewhere, former Conservative Prime Minister Sir John Major criticised the Vote Leave campaign in the Mail on Sunday for the "inaccuracies and falsehoods they are peddling to the British people". Speaking to Sky News, former Lib Dem Business Secretary Vince Cable said the party had argued throughout the coalition government that the Tories' migration target was "foolish" because it was "unachievable".
Former Conservative Prime Minister Sir John Major criticised the Vote Leave campaign in the Mail on Sunday for the "inaccuracies and falsehoods they are peddling to the British people".
He said the Leave campaign's focus on "raising fears" rather than "setting out facts" on immigration was "distasteful".He said the Leave campaign's focus on "raising fears" rather than "setting out facts" on immigration was "distasteful".