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When he arrives October 17th, I ask that our European friends give Boris NOTHING and give the British people EVERYTHING! / Let's stop No-Deal, secure an extension and give the British people a #FinalSay
In this edition ... Graham Hughes and Jason Hunter talk to carefully selected "young people" Jack Dart (@JackWDart) and "EU Supergirl" Madeleina Kay (@MadeleinaKay) about the youth vote, the good the EU does, and how it much it sucks to have the such a large proportion of the older generation vote to remove many of the rights and freedoms the youth of Britain were born with...
MPs have backed the government in voting against a popular EU programme which for years has helped students to study in other European countries.
Nearly 200,000 people have applied to register to vote in just 72 hours, and more than half of them are under 35.
YouGov polling is the latest in a rising trend to show a majority in favour of rejoining the European Union.
Travel companies warn European holiday prices set to rise 31% as a result of Brexit. Survey points to 25,000 UK jobs in the sector also at risk and warns of the damage to UK businessesand training opportunities for young people.
It's not just their opportunities, their futures, their freedoms – leaving without a deal risks young people's trust in politics too
The recent closure of the Charles Peguy centre is sad but hardly surprising.
Sophie Stowers and Alan Wager look back on a year in Brexit, using the UK in a Changing Europe/Redfield and Wilton Strategies Brexit tracker poll to highlight five key trends in attitudes to Brexit in 2022.
We are fighting to keep the UK open to EU membership. Best for Britain wants young people to steer Britain into the future.
"I think the Brexit thing, it's destroyed any hopes of chances for young musicians that are trying to make it," Gillespie tells the BBC.
Government urged to consider youth mobility visa.
‘What the government once called teething problems have now become a chronic condition’
Keir Starmer’s tedious, hardline rhetoric on Brexit actually reveals our path back to Europe.
Politics is changing whether the establishment likes it or not. Trust in traditional politics is low and institutions are weak, but pro-EU campaign groups and activist networks are springing up everywhere.
Under-18s were one of the groups not obliged to apply for a residency card by the October 4 deadline. We look at what they will need to do later
One in three young people (16 to 35) are considering leaving the UK to work in another European country due to uncertainty around Brexit as well as the Covid-19 pandemic
Financial Times US Editor-at-Large Gillian Tett says many people in the United States “are just baffled” Britain went along with Brexit, describing it as an “act of self-sabotage”. / “Britain has got the worst performance amongst the G7,” Ms Tett told Sky News Australia host Piers Morgan.
The president of the European Commission said it was up to young people to reverse Brexit after her generation "goofed it up".
"Those of a certain age who voted 70:30 to leave is rapidly being replaced by a younger generation who voted 70:30 to stay." / Former deputy PM Lord Michael Heseltine will warn politicians that Britain’s youth will “never forgive us” unless they are offered the chance to reverse Brexit. / “May our opponents never be forgiven for their allegations that it is us who are letting Britain down.”
As Layla Moran has said, ‘staying in Erasmus should be a no-brainer’ – but the people in charge of our country seem to have no brains
The five simple steps to make your voice heard and shape our futures. / I believe three things about British politics. One, the public hates Westminster. Two, Brexit will leave my generation with what is arguably the worst inheritance in peacetime history. Three, the political class don’t understand points one or two.
Action to turbo-drive pro-Europe campaign gets enthusiastic reception from big audience in Glasgow.
Women know Brexit is toxic. On International Women’s Day, dare we think of life without Brexit – and make it happen?
Seven years after the EU Referendum, Brexit is finding it increasingly difficult to retain its 2016 supporters let alone recruit new ones