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David Cameron wins deal for Britain's 'special status' in EU

Cameron will now hold an emergency cabinet meet today, ahead of the referendum expected on June 23

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AFPPTI Brussels
Last Updated : Feb 20 2016 | 11:42 AM IST
British Prime Minister David Cameron has sealed a deal for "special status" in the EU after a marathon summit, paving the way for him to campaign to stay in the bloc in a historic referendum.

The unanimous agreement came after two days and nights of intense negotiations in Brussels, despite European leaders digging in their heels on all the major reforms Cameron sought.

The British premier will hold an emergency cabinet meeting today as he embarks on the difficult process of selling the deal at home ahead of the referendum, expected on June 23.

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"I've negotiated a deal to give the UK special status in the European Union," Cameron told a press conference.

"I will be campaigning with all my heart and soul to persuade the British people to remain in the reformed European Union that we have secured today."

He said the deal contained a seven-year "emergency brake" on welfare payments for EU migrants and meant Britain would be "permanently out of ever closer union".

While Britain's place in the EU now rests in the hands of the British public, the deal removes one major headache for the bloc as it faces the biggest migration crisis in Europe's history.

EU president Donald Tusk - the man who brokered the deal - said the "unanimous" agreement "strengthens Britain's special status in the EU" and was "legally binding and irreversible".

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Europe's most powerful leader, said the accord was a "fair compromise".

"I do not think that we gave too much to Great Britain," she said.

French President Francois Hollande, meanwhile, insisted that the British deal contained "no exceptions to the rules" of the EU.

Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite, the first to break the news of the agreement, tweeted, "Drama over."

Yet the drama is only just beginning for Cameron, as he battles eurosceptic members of his own Conservative Party and a hostile popular media.

Britain's newspapers went to press shortly before the deal was officially announced, and most of today's editions focussed on the expected announcement that Cameron's long-time ally Michael Gove was to support a "Brexit".

The Guardian, Daily Telegraph, and Independent all carried front-page pictures of the former education secretary while the eurosceptic Daily Express ran with headline, "Gove to lead us out of EU.

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First Published: Feb 20 2016 | 10:57 AM IST

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