EU Immigration Limits Lose Big

Opponents warned of a possible backlash
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Sep 27, 2020 10:55 AM CDT
Swiss Soundly Reject Limiting EU Immigration
Laura Zimmermann, co-president of Operation Libero, stands at a poster reading 'No. No Switzerland is an island" Sunday in Bern, Switzerland.   (Peter Klaunzer/Keystone via AP)

Voters in Switzerland on Sunday strongly rejected a nationalist party's proposal to limit the number of European Union citizens allowed to live and work in their country. Public broadcaster SRF reported, based on a partial count, that the measure was rejected by 61.3% of voters, with 38.7% in favor. A large majority of the country's 26 cantons, or states, also rejected the plan proposed by the Swiss People's Party to give preferential access to jobs, social protection, and benefits to people from Switzerland over those from the 27-nation bloc that surrounds it, the AP reports. The government had warned that the measure could have further strained the rich Alpine’s country’s deep and lucrative ties to the EU, of which it isn’t a member. It could also lead to reciprocal disadvantages for millions of Swiss citizens if they want to live or work in the EU. Roughly 1.4 million EU citizens live in the country of about 8.6 million; around 500,000 Swiss live in EU countries.

In a similar referendum in 2014, the Swiss narrowly voted in favor of limiting access of EU citizens to live and work in Switzerland. But lawmakers refused to fully implement the referendum, fearing an impact on Swiss society and businesses, prompting the People’s Party to get the issue back on the ballot this year. Since the last vote, Switzerland has witnessed the turmoil that Britain's 2016 referendum to leave the European Union has caused, especially for EU citizens in the UK and Britons living on the continent. Britain left the EU in January, but is in a transition period until the end of the year, with prospects for a deal on future relations between London and Brussels still uncertain. Voter Yann Grote in Geneva said he didn't approve of further limiting freedom of movement. "It’s not a time to isolate Switzerland,” he said. Fellow voter Elisabeth Lopes said her parents were immigrants. "If Switzerland had to withdraw or reduce these agreements" with the EU, she said, "I think we would be the real losers."

(More European Union stories.)

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