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  • The Mayor of Konstanz, twin town of Richmond, Surrey, explains why "twinning" still matters

    June 20, 2025

    Date: 4 June 2025
    Author: Uli Burchardt
    Title: Mayor of Konstanz

    This year marks a very special moment for Konstanz: the reaffirmation of our twinning relationships with Richmond upon Thames and Fontainebleau. In times like these - marked by uncertainty, change, and global challenges - these longstanding bonds between cities carry more meaning than ever.

    Our twinning with Richmond goes back decades. It’s rooted in a shared belief that peace, understanding and friendship are best built through direct human connection. It began as a gesture of post-war reconciliation. Today, it stands as a living commitment to European cooperation, democratic values and mutual respect.

    When we think about international partnerships, we often picture formal agreements or ceremonial events. But twinning is something far more vital. It is about people. It’s about the students who visit each other’s schools and realise how much they have in common. It’s about artists who collaborate across languages and cultures. It’s about residents who meet, host, and share life experiences that stay with them for a lifetime.

    Konstanz is a city where borders are a part of daily life. We sit directly on the edge of Germany and Switzerland. We see, every day, how openness, cooperation and shared responsibility can work in practice. Twinning reflects this same spirit – crossing borders, building bridges and enriching our communities from the ground up.

    This reaffirmation is not just a formality. It is a signal – to our citizens, and to the wider world – that we remain committed to each other. That we believe in dialogue over division, in friendship over isolation. In an era of global challenges – climate change, social cohesion and political polarization – these partnerships are not just ‘nice to have’. They are vital. Because no city stands alone.

    In Richmond, we see a city that shares many of our values: a deep respect for culture and heritage, a commitment to sustainability, and a strong sense of community. The work that is done here – between schools, artists, young people and civic groups – is a great example of what international cooperation looks like when it is rooted in real relationships.

    To everyone in Richmond: thank you for the warm welcome you have extended to our delegation over the years and for the genuine friendship you continue to offer. We are proud to walk this path with you – and excited to write the next chapter of our partnership together.

    Let us reaffirm this twinning not just in words, but in action. Through exchange, collaboration and trust. Because strong cities make a strong Europe – and strong friendships make all the difference.

  • Leeds-Dortmund - German language initiative

    June 20, 2025

    January 2025:  Geoff Tranter, born in Leeds but a long-term resident of Leeds’s twin city, Dortmund, has developed a Beginners’ German Course for English-speaking visitors from Leeds to the Twin City.  The course is built around the needs of a British visitor to Germany and presents practical and cultural information about the city of Dortmund.  His work was generously funded by the local Government of North Rhein-Westphalia. Recent promotion of the course attracted interest from over 200 citizens of Leeds.

  • West Midlands - European Capital of Innovation award

    June 20, 2025

    In November 2024 the West Midlands won 3rd place as European Capital of Innovation under the Horizon Europe programme which the UK has now re-joined.

    For more info:

    https://eic.ec.europa.eu/eic-prizes/european-capital-innovation-awards/european-capital-innovation-awards-icapital-2024-25-winners_en

  • Bristol - EU Pilot Cities Programme

    June 20, 2025

    In March 2023 Bristol was awarded €1.5 million (£1.3 million) following a successful bid for a new innovative climate action project through the NetZeroCities Pilot Cities Programme from the EU Pilot Cities programme.

    Together with 52 fellow Pilot Cities across Europe, Bristol – the only UK city to be awarded funding – is using the grant to further accelerate climate action and rapidly decarbonise the city. The successful Bristol consortium partners are Bristol City Council, Bristol and Bath Regional Capital, Bristol Green Capital Partnership and Abundance Investment.  

    For more info:

    https://research-and-innovation.ec.europa.eu/funding/funding-opportunities/funding-programmes-and-open-calls/horizon-europe/eu-missions-horizon-europe/climate-neutral-and-smart-cities_en

  • Bristol - EU Pilot Cities Programme

    June 20, 2025

  • UK-EU Summit 2025: EM UK in the Spotlight

    June 02, 2025

    The UK-EU summit in London on the 19th May was an opportunity for European Movement UK (EM UK) to connect with the UK and international press on some of the main issues being discussed in the 'reset' of UK-EU relations - Labour's plan to improve business, trade and travel with its largest trading partner.

    One of those issues was Youth Mobility, which now often goes under the name 'Youth Experience Scheme' (YES). Noises have been made about limited-term visas for younger people to work and study in the EU, and vice versa.

    After EM UK's press office sent out a 'broadcast guest offer' a few days before the summit, Sky News approached us the end result was our new President of Young European Movement doing his first broadcast interview. You can watch that on the EM UK YouTube page here:

    Another key issue was a proposed UK-EU defence pact. Our CEO, Sir Nick Harvey, is a former Armed Forces Minister and renowned expert on all defence-related issues. Again broadcasting before the summit, you can hear him here expounding on the various possibilities for a closer future relationship.

    That was in fact our second 'hit' of the day on LBC. Our Chair Dr Mike Galsworthy had also done an earlier turn. You can see that here.

    This by the way after Mike had done a full THREE HOUR slot on GB News, sitting on set, chatting through every possible issue that the reset could throw up. On days like May 19th, it is important to give people factual information - and sometimes you have to do that in the lion's den.

    Our Head of Campaigns, Richard Kilpatrick, was also in the press mix, with one of the subjects that really seemed to dominate the headlines across the entire summit - fish. You can read Richard's thoughts in The Independent here.

    Left Foot Forward requested a 'thoughts roundup' after the summit. That was a chance for our Public Affairs Manager, Joe Meighan, to put pen to paper (after earlier appearing on GB News as a guest). You can read Joe's article in full here.

    Our Co-President Dominic Grieve was making international airwaves, meanwhile, as it seems even Australia was keeping an eye on what the UK-EU reset might mean globally. You can hear some of that interview here.

    Sir Nick Harvey was also interviewed for City AM, again with a focus on the options for closer defence cooperation. You can read that piece in full here.

    Sir Nick was having a busy day. He also appeared on BBC Radio 2. You can hear his interview with Ros Atkins here:

    Why is this important? Because getting the movement into the press is essential for our campaign to take the UK back to the heart of Europe.

    By securing widespread media coverage for our key messages and expert spokespeople, we are ensuring that informed, fact-based perspectives reach a broad and global audience. The more we do this, the more we are strengthening public understanding and the more support we are gaining in the campaign for a positive and ever-closer UK-EU relationship.

  • Watch: Miriam Margolyes on the Plight of Touring Musicians

    May 22, 2025

    Actor Miriam Margolyes has teamed up with European Movement UK to highlight the plight of musicians and touring artists trying to work in the EU post-Brexit.

    In a short animated film, she explains the effects leaving the European Union has had on the industry.

    You can watch the film here:

    For UK artists, touring the EU was once a seamless journey. Since Brexit, this has now become a maze of paperwork, expensive visas and complicated work permits.

    Gigs are disappearing. Musicians are losing opportunities. Fewer European acts are making their way to the UK.

    Music scenes are losing their lifeblood and the UK’s live music sector is crying out for change.

    Watch the video and see for yourself the damage this foolish decision is causing. 

    Then, once you’ve watched it, sign our Face The Music petition.

    What our campaign is calling for is simple. 

    We are calling for visa-free travel for musicians and for a review of post-Brexit travel restrictions, so that we can get our musicians back on tour.

    Together, let’s tell the government to face the music and negotiate a solution so that Brexit doesn’t put-out any more of our shining stars.

  • The key outcomes from this week’s UK-EU Summit

    May 19, 2025

    This week’s UK-EU summit in London was a long-overdue and hopeful step toward rebuilding a constructive, cooperative relationship between the United Kingdom and the European Union.

    Read more

  • UK-EU talks on the hook because of fishing - here's why

    May 15, 2025

    Today’s news brings us another splashy headline: reports that a fish deal—or lack thereof, could sink UK-EU summit talks. Yes, you read that right. Not nuclear policy. Not AI regulation. Fish. Once again, the humble haddock finds itself thrust to the centre of geopolitics.

    Read more

  • European Movement UK's Response to the US-UK Free Trade Deal

    May 09, 2025

    No agreement with a country thousands of miles away can replace the benefits of being part of the world’s largest single market on our doorstep.

    The UK pursued a trade deal with the US alone because we are no longer a member of the EU, but that doesn’t mean it was worth it.

    Read more