11:59 30 June 2014
Following his failure to block the appointment of Jean-Claude Juncker as incoming European Commission president, Prime Minister David Cameron said that he is determined to renegotiate the UK-EU relationship and then put the changes to a referendum on whether the UK should say in or leave the EU.
The announcement came after he forced a vote of EU states on Friday on the selection of MrJuncker – but lost it 26-2. Mr Cameron said: "Sometimes it is possible to be isolated and to be right.” Hungary joined Britain after it also voted to block the appointment of Mr Juncker, who is seen as a backer of closer political union in the EU.
Although Germany supported Mr Juncker’s appointment, its finance minister said that a British exit from the EU was “unimaginable” and “absolutely unacceptable.”
Wolfgang Schauble said: "Clearly, we have in many economic questions and regulatory questions a broad consensus. "Historically, politically, democratically, culturally, Great Britain is entirely indispensable for Europe.
Meanwhile, Labour ex-European Commissioner Lord Mandelson said that MrJuncker should be given the benefit of the doubt. He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: "We should give him the benefit of the doubt.
"He explicitly said he does not advocate a united states of Europe - he's not a green-eyed federalist minister as some in Britain have portrayed him.
"MrJuncker has the experience and the knowledge to be an effective president of the European Commission."