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Before leaving for the trip today he said he expected the 27-nation grouping would have to submit to treaty change despite top EU officials previously saying there was no appetite for it.
Cameron will also discuss the civil war in Syria during his talks with Spanish premier Mariano Rajoy, French President Francois Hollande and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, his office said. His tour begins early today with his first official visit to Madrid since taking office in 2010 and he will then travel to Paris on Monday evening for a working dinner with Hollande.
Cameron will visit Berlin at the end of the week for “further discussions about taking forward his (EU) reform agenda,” Downing Street said. Cameron sent shockwaves through the EU in January when he set out plans to wrest back powers from Brussels and to then put Britain’s reshaped membership to an in-out referendum by the end of 2017.
In an interview with five European newspapers being published on Monday, Cameron called on the EU to bring in “change that all of Europe can benefit from”. “We are a major European power, a major European player. But do we think that the European Union has sometimes overreached itself with directives and interventions and interferences? Yes, it has. And that needs to change,” he said.
“I think this organisation is ripe for reform. I think we’re in a global race where we have to compete with (countries like) India, China, Indonesia and Malaysia,” he said. He cited the agreement by EU leaders in February to cut its 2014-2020 budget as an example of recent reformist moves by the bloc.
Cameron also told the journalists from France’s Le Monde, Germany’s Sueddeutsche Zeitung , Italy’s Il Sole 24 Ore, Spain’s El Mundo and Poland’s Gazeta Wyborcza that he believed alterations to the EU’s treaties would also be likely.
EU president Herman van Rompuy warned in February there was no appetite among EU leaders for any major treaty change, insisting the focus in coming years would be on shoring up the eurozone — the 17 countries that use the single currency that Britain is not part of.
But Cameron insisted: “I think there will be treaty change.”
Source Article from http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/international-business/britains-david-cameron-to-push-reform-on-tour-of-eu-capitals/articleshow/19450553.cms




