Isabel Hardman Isabel Hardman

EU budget: MPs warned revolt ‘could undermine coalition’

It was inevitable that the new team of whips was going to be rather unsettled by tomorrow’s vote on the EU budget: it’s the first challenge the team has had to face. But what is surprising is quite how serious their palpitations are. I understand from a number of Conservative MPs that one of the key threats isn’t you-won’t-get-a-promotion-in-this-government, or we’ll-reveal-the-truth-about-your-mistress, but that a big rebellion tomorrow will threaten the very stability of the coalition government.

When I was first told this, I found it slightly incredible: this is a non-binding vote where the popular amendment calls for the Prime Minister to go further than he has promised in negotiations, rather than directly contradicting his stance. But MP after MP has confirmed to me that the whips are using this threat to quell the rebellion. I understand that one whip has even been suggesting that if Labour joins forces with the eurosceptics and supports the Reckless/Pritchard amendment calling for a real-terms cut, this will undermine confidence in David Cameron so completely that there will have to be a vote of confidence in his leadership by the end of this week.

Now, this is ridiculous. The amendment that MPs are signing up to – and the list now numbers around 40, those in the rebel camp tell me – is not actually that dangerous for the Prime Minister. For one thing, it is not binding on him. He could also use it to his advantage in negotiations at the budget summit in November, telling other European leaders that he has a vote from his own parliament calling for a cut and that therefore he must push for this sort of deal. The major downside is that it could position Labour as a party of fiscal discipline, which is amusingly implausible.

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