
The next Government should...




A blueprint for the next Parliament
The European Movement’s Manifesto on Europe sets out a clear series of policy asks of candidates standing in the General Election. The Manifesto aims to provide the next Parliament with a blueprint to stop further damaging divergence with Europe and a means to start reversing the calamity of Brexit.
Download ManifestoThe UK has never turned its back on the world stage when our people and our allies need us to act. Now, once again, our country needs strong, patriotic and principled leadership.
Since 2016, the trust between the UK and the EU has been severely tested. It is not in the interests of the UK or the EU that this relationship remains strained. For the benefit of the British people, our economy, our standing in the world and in response to aggressive foreign actors, the next Government must work to reset our relationship with our closest neighbours and strongest allies.
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Since the referendum in 2016, people have changed their minds on Brexit. In 2022, YouGov found that among Leave voters who have changed their minds, 25% have done so because they have “seen things get worse”. 19% have changed their minds because of the “state of the economy and rising prices”. Meanwhile, 11% have changed their mind because they feel that they were “lied to” during the campaign.
Now more than ever, a new Parliament and the next Government must be upfront and honest about the realities. We owe it to the British people to take stock of the impact of that decision 8 years on and 4 years after the end of the transition period.
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UK civil society, charities, businesses and industrial bodies have warned of the erosion of standards and rights from which we benefitted as members of the European Union when they were introduced. In 2023, the Retained EU Law Bill threatened to give power to Government Ministers to delete, amend or keep laws that originated in the EU with little scrutiny or oversight.
Thankfully the worst aspects of that failed, but as time passes the UK diverges more and more with laws and standards in the EU. There has been “notable divergence on climate and environmental standards,” and “significantly fewer new restrictions on chemicals and pesticides in Great Britain than the EU since Brexit.”
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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.
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