This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/jun/01/boris-johnson-insists-not-presenting-post-cameron-government-vote-leave

The article has changed 6 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 0 Version 1
Boris Johnson insists he is not presenting a post-Cameron government Boris Johnson insists immigration pledge is not bid to oust Cameron
(about 4 hours later)
Boris Johnson has insisted he is not presenting an alternative programme for government in preparation to succeed David Cameron, after the leave campaign set out detailed plans for a points-based immigration system and a cut to VAT on energy bills. Boris Johnson has said he is “not forming an alternative government” to replace David Cameron despite putting forward detailed plans for a new immigration system.
The former London mayor said the Brexit campaign was merely setting out the policy options in the event of Britain leaving the EU, after putting forward the proposals with Michael Gove, the justice secretary, and Priti Patel, the employment minister. The former London mayor joined with Michael Gove, the justice secretary, and Priti Patel, the employment minister, to pledge new “Australian-style” immigration controls by 2020 which, he said, he hoped would be carried out after a vote to leave the EU on June 23.
“All we are saying is what any government could do and we are saying after we vote leave on 23 June it will be up to the government to take back control,” he said. The trio went on a campaign tour of Lancashire, during which Johnson was asked if his proposals amounted to an alternative to Cameron’s administration. Johnson said that was not the plan. “We are not forming an alternative government, we are presenting alternatives to the government,” he said.
Asked whether he was setting out an alternative to Cameron’s government, he said that was not the plan. But he referred several times to the policies that would be carried out by “the government of the day” and “any government” that might be in power after the 23 June referendum, rather than this current government. However, on several occasions Johnson referred to immigration policies that would be enacted by “the government of the day” and “any government” in power. If the UK were to vote to leave the EU, it is widely agreed that Cameron’s premiership would be in peril.
Related: Brexiters are missing the point of Australian-style immigration When it was pointed out to Johnson that he would have to change Cameron’s mind or depose him in order to implement the new immigration plan, he added: “At the moment we are stuck in the EU so it [the immigration policy] is not possible but post-23 June that option will be on the table. What we want to do is take back control over immigration and have more fairness over the way it is done.”
Patel also told a crowd in Preston, Lancashire, that the Brexit campaign was looking to “take back control of our country and our government”. Johnson has long been a favourite to succeed Cameron but his chances of doing so have increased since he backed the campaign to leave the EU, with Conservative members mostly in favour of Brexit.
She was backed up by Gove who said leaving the EU would “make the government accountable to the people of this country, and give the next generation the confidence of knowing that their destiny is going to be shaped by people they chose, they elected, and who have got the best interests of this wonderful nation at heart”.
He added: “Twenty-one days, £350m, 55 million people in this country liberated: that’s the promise if we vote to leave the European Union.”
Johnson has long been considered a favourite to succeed the prime minister, although he insists this will not happen even if there is a vote to leave.
Cameron has also insisted that he would want to stay on to negotiate with Brussels but he would come under intense pressure to resign if the country rejects his entreaties to stay in the EU. Some within his party want him to face a leadership challenge regardless of the result.
Johnson’s chances of being the successful candidate in any leadership race have increased since he backed the campaign to leave the EU, with Conservative members mostly in favour of Brexit.
Related: 'The whole process is a travesty': readers on the EU referendumRelated: 'The whole process is a travesty': readers on the EU referendum
The immigration policy statement released on Tuesday night appeared particularly like a manifesto pledge as it was set out jointly by Johnson, Gove and Patel, who could be three leading figures in any post-Cameron Conservative government. It was also phrased as a pledge, rather than merely an option. The immigration policy statement made by the three MPs was first released on Tuesday night. Using the language of an election manifesto the proposal was also phrased as a pledge, rather than merely an option.
“By the next general election, we will create a genuine Australian-style points-based immigration system. The automatic right of all EU citizens to come to live and work in the UK will end, as will EU control over vital aspects of our social security system,” they wrote.“By the next general election, we will create a genuine Australian-style points-based immigration system. The automatic right of all EU citizens to come to live and work in the UK will end, as will EU control over vital aspects of our social security system,” they wrote.
In response, Cameron warned that an Australian-style immigration system could “crash our economy”. On the campaign tour, Gove, a close political ally of Cameron until the EU referendum campaign, said the aim was to “liberate” the prime minister so that he could fulfil his manifesto pledge to reduce net migration to tens of thousands rather than hundreds of thousands.
Remain campaigners have said the plan would be economically disastrous and could even lead to higher levels of net migration. “Australia has more migration per head than we do here in the UK, so I think it’s the wrong approach,” the prime minister told BBC Radio 5 Live. “The only way [Cameron] can fulfil that pledge is by leaving the EU,” he said. “He’s the prime minister who sets policy, he will set policy on 23 June but we just want to liberate him to be able to fulfil the manifesto pledge we all stood on.”
British citizens would also be disadvantaged, he said. “I also think if we were to say to Europeans they needed work permits to come to Britain, European countries would say to us we need work permits to go and work there,” he said. Patel told a crowd in Preston that the Brexit campaign was looking to “take back control of our country and our government”.
George Osborne, the chancellor, also branded the promise of a points-based system “fantasy politics” that would lead to a rise in net migration. All the leading campaigners for Brexit, including Johnson, Gove and Patel, claim publicly that they would want Cameron to carry on as prime minister regardless of the referendum result.
Downing Street sources dismissed Vote Leave’s policies, calling them “completely unworkable” and adding: “Above all, it’s not in their power to implement it.” Cameron himself is insisting that he would want to stay on to negotiate with Brussels, despite having said he does not want to serve a third term. However, he would undoubtedly come under intense pressure to resign if the country rejects his entreaties to stay in the EU. Some in his party want him to face a leadership challenge regardless of the result.
Remain campaigners led by the prime minister said the immigration plan would be economically disastrous and could even lead to higher levels of net migration. The Australian government tries to increase its population through controlled immigration.
“Australia has more migration per head than we do here in the UK, so I think it’s the wrong approach,” Cameron told BBC Radio 5 Live. “I also think if we were to say to Europeans they needed work permits to come to Britain, European countries would say to us we need work permits to go and work there.”
George Osborne, the chancellor, called the pledge of a points-based system “fantasy politics” that would lead to a rise in net migration.
Downing Street sources called Vote Leave’s policies “completely unworkable” and added: “Above all, it’s not in their power to implement it.”
Sir Nigel Sheinwald, former British representative to the EU, confirmed it could have practical consequences for Britons wanting to emigrate in the future if other European countries apply similar rules to UK citizens.
Related: Brexiters are missing the point of Australian-style immigration
“I doubt the leave campaign have even bothered to think about this, but the other EU countries are bound to look at reciprocal measures, which could involve Brits having to be fluent in the language before working, living or retiring in other countries in Europe,” he said.
“You don’t need to have been in as many negotiations as I have in Europe to know that Vote Leave’s immigration plans will have far reaching and serious negative consequences.
“The introduction of this policy could well make life difficult for Brits already living in the rest of Europe. But it will certainly lead to serious restrictions of the right of Brits wanting to live and work on the continent in the future.
Carolyn Fairbairn, CBI director general, said: “The UK already has a points-based system for non-EU migrants. Extending this to Europe would require giving up access to the single market, which would be hugely damaging for our economy.
“In addition, it is important to recognise the £2.5bn tax contribution migrants make to the UK. We must continue to ensure that free movement of labour in the EU remains a right for workers that boosts our prosperity, not a route to benefits.”
Others raised concerns about the tone of Vote Leave’s campaign, with Trevor Phillips, the former chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, saying the leave camp’s stance on immigration risks fuelling an insurgency of far-right politics.
Phillips, a board member of Britain Stronger in Europe, said the senior Conservatives “shout fairness but mean exclusion” when they promise to put in place an Australian-style points system.
“I think the Brexit camp is desperate and they have run out of arguments and are really trying to strike some emotional chords of a particularly ugly kind,” he told the Guardian.