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Cameron was forced to 'retreat' over EU migrant plan

Prime Minster David Cameron backtracked from a radical plan to cap directly the number of EU migrants entering Britain after an intervention, according to reports.

But the PM had said that European migrants will be banned from claiming a range of benefits for the first four years after they arrive in the UK, under radical immigration reforms set out by David Cameron.

Unemployed Europeans will have six months to find a job or face being removed from the country, the Prime Minister will say in a speech on immigration reform today.

Mr Cameron said he has ruled "nothing out" if British concerns over migration "fall on deaf ears" at the European Union.

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Poland warns it will block bid to slash EU migrant benefits

Polish leaders have warned they will block David Cameron’s bid to clamp down on EU migrants claiming benefits, unless the rules will apply to British citizens as well.

The Prime Minister wants to stop migrants from claiming benefits for the first four years after they arrive in Britain, and kick out anyone who fails to find work after six months.

But Polish minister Rafal Trzaskowski told BBC's Newsnight that he believes the plans would go against all existing laws, and warned Poland would vote against the change.

If one wants to get away with all the benefits that are enshrined in the regulation of EU and treat immigrants from EU differently, and for example only pay benefits after four years of their stay in Britain or extradite people who can't find work, that would be against all the existing laws of the EU and obviously that would be a red line for us.

When it comes to changing the rules in the EU, when it comes to social support and so forth, when it comes to undermining the existing laws, obviously we are going to react quite strongly and we are going to be against.

– Rafal Trzaskowski, Polish minister

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