ASHFORD, England (Reuters) - Finance minister George Osborne said on Wednesday he would introduce an emergency budget if Britain voted to leave the European Union, but 57 of his own Conservative Party’s lawmakers said they would block his spending cuts and tax hikes.

Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne delivers a speech on the economic impact of the UK leaving the European Union, at a B&Q Store Support Office in Chandler's Ford, Britain, May 23, 2016. REUTERS/Daniel Leal Olivas/Pool

The escalation in the ruling party’s internal war over the EU raised the prospect of a government unable to operate normally in the event of a victory for “Leave” in a June 23 referendum on whether to stay in the bloc.

With opinion polls showing momentum swinging towards Leave, the chief executive of aerospace and engineering group Rolls-Royce wrote to British staff warning that a so-called Brexit could result in important investment decisions being postponed.

Osborne, who along with Prime Minister David Cameron is leading efforts to keep Britain in, said he would have to respond to a Leave vote with tax rises and spending cuts worth 30 billion pounds ($43 billion).

“There will be a big hole in the public finances and ... we would have to raise taxes and cut spending,” Osborne told reporters after giving a speech in Ashford, southeast England.

Measures could include a 2-point rise in the basic rate of income tax to 22 percent and increases in tax rates and duties on alcohol and petrol, while spending on health, education and defense could be cut by 2 percent.

The official Vote Leave campaign hit back with a statement signed by 57 Conservative lawmakers who said they would block the proposed measures in parliament.

“If the Chancellor is serious then we cannot possibly allow this to go ahead ... If he were to proceed with these proposals, the Chancellor’s position would become untenable,” they said.

The government currently has a working majority of 17 in the House of Commons. The opposition Labour Party, which has 229 lawmakers to the Conservatives’ 330, would oppose the emergency budget, its leader Jeremy Corbyn told the House.

“ECONOMIC TAILSPIN”

Osborne said he would aim to introduce the emergency measures within two months of a Leave vote.

“The one thing worse than not passing a budget like that is dealing with an economic tailspin, or the complete loss of confidence in the ability of the country to manage its money,” he said, without spelling out how he would get the measures through parliament.

Some independent economists said Osborne’s promise of a tighter budget after an “Out” vote could make it harder for Britain’s economy to cope with its uncertain future.

“In the short run, tax increases or spending cuts would be entirely the wrong response to a Brexit shock,” Jonathan Portes, principal research fellow at the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, a think tank, said.

An opinion poll published late on Tuesday showed the once double-digit lead of the “In” campaign had narrowed to just 1 percentage point. Other polls have shown the “Out” camp ahead, reducing the value of sterling and wiping billions of dollars off global stock markets.

Pollster BMG Research said a web page purporting to show a press release giving the results of its latest EU referendum polling was a hoax. Markets have been increasingly jittery in the run-up to the vote and sterling has reacted sharply to some opinion polls.

Housebuilder Berkeley reported a 20-percent drop in reservations of new homes in the first five months of the year, saying buyers were telling the company they were holding off until after the referendum.

“The economic uncertainty that the Leave campaign carelessly insist won’t be caused is already being seen,” Osborne said.

He gave his speech alongside his predecessor as finance minister, Labour’s Alistair Darling, who was in post during Britain’s descent into the financial crisis in 2008.

“I’m even more worried now, much more worried, than I was in 2008,” Darling said. “The Leave campaign has no idea, no plan whatsoever.”

The Vote Leave campaign rejected that assertion, publishing what it said was a post-Brexit roadmap. This called for informal talks with EU countries ahead of a formal negotiation for a new EU-Britain treaty and immediate legislation to make emergency provisions for the transition period.

Pro-Brexit cabinet minister Chris Grayling said that after a Leave vote the public would need to see immediate action.

“We will need a carefully managed negotiation process and some major legislative changes before 2020,” he said in a statement.