In pursuit of a ‘Hard Brexit’, the UK left a vast series of European agencies and organisations when it left the EU on 31 January 2020. Many of these agencies and programmes provided meaningful benefits to the UK.
The UK is being seriously and unnecessarily damaged by the decision to leave institutions like Euratom, the European Medicines Agency, the European Environment Agency and programmes like Horizon Europe, Erasmus+ and Creative Europe.
The current government belatedly recognised the need for the UK to associate with the Horizon Europe programme, funding scientific research into groundbreaking cancer treatments and efforts to meet the climate emergency.
But Erasmus+ is equally important and the UK’s absence from it is depriving British young people of learning and development opportunities.
Key Recommendations:
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Complete the Young European Movement’s campaign objective to rejoin Erasmus+.
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Accept the invitation by the European Commission to negotiate a Youth Mobility Scheme allowing our young people opportunities to study, work, or train in an EU member state.
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Pursue the closest possible working relationship with the European Medicines Agency to try and avoid further delays in access to new treatments.
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Call for a new Government to begin negotiating a veterinary and food safety agreement with the EU to ease trade friction.
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Rejoin the European Environment Agency.
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Seek deeper agreements with the EU across the board from defence to food safety to fighting climate change.
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Accomplish the European Movement’s Face the Music campaign goal by securing reciprocal access for British contractors, musicians and performers travelling to the EU for work – and their counterparts from the EU working in the UK – in the form of a cultural touring visa.
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Realign the UK as an associate member of European agencies.