THE Conservative MP for North Cornwall has given his backing to leave the European Union, saying it is time the country ‘shaped its own destiny’.

Scott Mann has announced he will be backing the ‘Vote Leave’ campaign.

Mr Mann said there is ‘a good chance’ the EU referendum will be held this year and he believes the reasons for leaving the EU ‘far outweigh’ those for staying in, with EU policy ‘negatively affecting’ some of the main industries in Cornwall, like fishing and farming.

Open to the process of renegotiation, Mr Mann said he wants what is best for Britain, but that the terms being discussed between Number 10 and Brussels ‘do not go far enough to properly address the issues which affect the UK’, such as ‘open door’ immigration, membership fees and law-making.

His decision to back the campaign to leave the EU puts Mr Mann at odds with Prime Minister David Cameron and Chancellor George Osborne, both of whom hope negotiations with Brussels on reform will result in Britain staying in.

Mr Mann said: “I believe the Government were right to seek to renegotiate our relationship with the EU, but Brussels has not offered the fundamental change we need. That is why I will be backing the Leave Campaign.

“The EU costs us £350-million a week; we could spend this money on our priorities like the NHS, not EU bureaucrats. I believe that the people making the key decisions about how that money is spent should be accountable to the public, not unaccountable in Brussels.”

Mr Mann said he believes that remaining in the EU is riskier than leaving, and that the UK is part of a club that wields power and influence, which was not agreed to by the UK electorate in the 1975 referendum.

He added: “A vote to remain, I believe, is riskier than a vote to leave. When we were led into the European Union it was sold to the public as a free trade deal. It has subsequently become an integrated, federalised and complex beast, which the United Kingdom has little control over.

“There are those in the EU who wish to see far greater integration, I believe this would be against our national interests. Britain is a proud nation, a nation that wishes to make its own choices and we will stand or fall based on decisions we make, not decisions made by others.”

Commenting on how the UK’s membership has affected North Cornwall and the county as a whole, Mr Mann said fishermen and farmers were being treated as ‘second class citizens’.

“In North Cornwall, as in many rural areas in the UK, the Common Agricultural Policy and the Common Fisheries Policy shape the economy. Both are held up as success stories in Europe, but the farmers and fishermen that work within the structure are treated like second class citizens to their European counterparts.

“It is not in the national interest of the French, Spanish, and German governments to put British interests before their own. That is why I believe that the European Union is so fundamentally flawed.

“The important issues for us Brits are taking back control of our borders; the cost of membership, and the supremacy of our Parliament. They are simply not up for debate as long as we are anchored inside the European Union.

“I believe it’s time we flew our own plane, shaped our own destiny and took back control.”