Video David Cameron at Davos: production is coming back to the UK – video Live Davos 2014 - day three live - Cameron's immigration policy comes under fire


  • Cameron's immigration policy comes under fire

    A UK Border Agency worker
    David Cameron forced to defend restrictions on new entrants as he set out case for re-shoring jobs to Britain at Davos


    David Cameron's hardline immigration policy under fire at Davos

    Prime minister forced to defend restrictions on new entrants as he sets out case for re-shoring jobs to Britain
    David Cameron in Davos
    David Cameron addresses the World Economic Forum in Davos. Photograph: Eric Piermont/AFP/Getty Images
    David Cameron's hardline immigration policy came under fire on Friday at the World Economic Forum as the prime minister was forced to defend restrictions on new entrants to the UK.
    Using a setpiece speech to put the case for re-shoring jobs to the UK from overseas, the prime minster also set himself on a collision course with environmental protesters by outlining the importance of developing shale gas in the UK.
    A member of the audience in Davos – describing herself as a Swedish MEP – was applauded as she asked for her British counterparts to be more co-operative in the European parliament and questioned Cameron about Britain's restrictions on immigrants to the UK.
    He said he made "absolutely no apology" for changes to the British benefits system. "The right to move in Europe and apply for jobs in other European countries is an important freedom in the Europe Union … [but] it is right to move to go and work and not a right to go and claim benefits," he said.
    He pointed to the flow of 1.5 million people into the UK when eight new members joined the EU in 2004 – "the largest migratory movement in recent British history".
    Cameron is trying to avoid a row with his own MPs by preparing to make changes to the law to make it difficult for future governments to allow unlimited migration from future EU member states. Since the start of 2014, new migrant jobseekers from the EU have had to wait three months before they receive jobseeker's allowance.
    The focus of his speech was that Britain was open for business, setting out the case for secure energy policy, the UK court system and freedom of the media.
    He urged the EU to avoid "burdensome, unjustified and premature" regulations on fracking after the controversy caused by French oil firm Total investing in exploiting shale gas in the UK. It is banned from such activities in France.
    Cheap and affordable energy would encourage re-shoring, he said, as he set out the benefits of shale gas to the US.
    "There is no doubt that when it comes to re-shoring in the US, one of the most important factors has been the development of shale gas, which is flooring US energy prices, with billions of dollars of energy cost savings predicted over the next decade," said Cameron.
    "If this is done properly shale gas can have lower emissions than normal gas," he said in an attempt to head off criticism that the fracking process can be harmful to the environment and local living conditions.
    "Look at what shale gas has done for America – for American firms and American jobs," Cameron said, pointing to a million more jobs and half a trillion dollars of GDP each year to 2030.
    The employers' body the CBI backed re-shoring. "As our European umbrella organisation, Business Europe, argues, increasing industrial competitiveness should be a key priority for EU reform, which would encourage more companies to re-shore," said director-general John Cridland.
    "The EU must focus on growth and competitiveness to help re-shore jobs and activities back to the UK and continent.
    "The benefits of EU membership to the British economy far outweigh the costs but if it were to become more outward-looking, strengthen the single market and take a fresh approach to regulation to ensure it supports rather than obstructs firms, it could create real opportunities for bringing more jobs back."
    Cameron insisted that wanted Britain to remain part of the European Union and Scotland to remain part of the UK.
    Frances O'Grady, head of the TUC, asked Cameron to use his call for re-shoring to back the living wage but the prime minster refused to do so.
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