Pages tagged "Brexit"

  • Face The Music: A New Nationwide Campaign For Musicians and Artists

    ‘Leaving the EU has destroyed people’s careers.’ That’s the view of one of the classical music world’s brightest young talents, James Henshaw. It’s the view of others working in music, too.  

    From bands and instrument makers to backstage staff – the loss of freedom of movement, the ‘work-90-days-in-180’ rule, and the mind-boggling visa and carnet system – all mean one of the UK’s most successful cultural exports is being slowly destroyed. 

    It’s why our new campaign is urging the Government to stop the damage being done to the UK music industry. 

    Face The Music, led by European Movement UK, is shining a spotlight on the plight of musicians, touring artists and backstage staff, since the UK left the EU on 31st January 2020, and is urging the Government to negotiate a bilateral agreement, one which guarantees visa-free travel for UK artists in the EU, and for EU artists in the UK.  

    Our research shows a talent drain on British music, from up-and-coming stars leaving Britain to live in an EU country, to instrument makers who have lost their EU customers due to rising exports costs, to jobbing musicians who face being shut out of freelance work because they no longer hold an EU passport. 

    “I was forced to choose between my job and my country,” said James Henshaw, a rising star among conductors on the UK classical music scene, who moved from London to Germany in 2020.  

    “I knew that if I wanted to continue working, I couldn’t stay in the UK. In my own country. I felt shut out. Everyone in the classical music world is constantly moving. 8 weeks here, 8 weeks there. About 15% of my work before Brexit was in the UK, and the rest was from around the world – a lot from the EU. But after 2020, I could see that EU work drying up. Because if several candidates go for a job, and you’re the only one who needs a visa and all the paperwork, you don’t stand a chance. So I had to move. I had to, to keep working.” 

    Matt Carghill plays in the band Sly and the Family Drone. He used to tour EU countries every year – but that’s now stopped.  

    “We’d just get in the van – instruments, merchandise, throw it all in and off you go. It was the merchandise sales that got us through, the money that would pay for the fuel to get to the next gig. Now, because of all the export costs, you can’t do it. It’s over.” 

    Rachel Nicholls is a freelance British soprano in opera and concert, currently starring in The Handmaid’s Tale in London. Since leaving the EU, her whole career has changed.  

    “I used to do three or four jobs in the EU every year. Since Brexit, I’ve done just one EU job in 7 years. Those jobs are still there, but now they’re going to artists who aren’t from the UK. The 90-day rule, and the visas you need, just mean UK musicians are not considered any more. It’s too difficult to employ them. I know so many people leaving the industry. We are doing severe, irreparable damage to the UK music industry, and it is the younger people I feel so, so sorry for.” 

    Chris and Sabina Allen-Kormylo make specialist hand-made instruments, hurdy-gurdys, from a workshop at the back of their house in Wales.  

    “We used to have about 30% of our business from EU customers,” Chris tells us, Now the phone never rings from them, ever. Why would you buy from us, when you might have to pay hundreds of pounds more just to have your instrument shipped to you? EU customers can’t even have instruments shipped to me for repair anymore, because you risk it being stuck in a warehouse at customs somewhere for weeks on end. That business is gone, and we just have to live with it.” 

    Watch musicians' stories.

    Sign the petition.

    Stand with us and tell this government to Face The Music.

  • Brexit Dead Ringer

    Watch Brexit Dead Ringer, and:

     

    Here are ten ways Brexit has been a disaster for our NHS: 

    • less money to treat patients  
    • less money to pay NHS staff  
    • higher costs for medicines, equipment and energy 
    • shortages of doctors, nurses and care workers 
    • longer waiting lists and delays 
    • higher risks of medicine shortages 
    • more deaths from Covid
    • harder to prepare for a future pandemic 
    • exclusion from EU policies and programmes  
    • Brexit is bad for your health. 

    Decades of Brexit lies, cover-ups and scandal have finally caught up. Britain cannot thrive whilst crippled by Brexit and the people responsible want you to forget their lies. Don’t.  


    Sign up now to join the Battle for the Soul of our Country.

    Sign up
  • Brexit Dead Ringer

    Watch Brexit Dead Ringer, and:

     

    Here are ten ways Brexit has been a disaster for our NHS: 

    • less money to treat patients  
    • less money to pay NHS staff  
    • higher costs for medicines, equipment and energy 
    • shortages of doctors, nurses and care workers 
    • longer waiting lists and delays 
    • higher risks of medicine shortages 
    • more deaths from Covid
    • harder to prepare for a future pandemic 
    • exclusion from EU policies and programmes  
    • Brexit is bad for your health. 

    Decades of Brexit lies, cover-ups and scandal have finally caught up. Britain cannot thrive whilst crippled by Brexit and the people responsible want you to forget their lies. Don’t.  


    Sign up now to join the Battle for the Soul of our Country.

    Sign up
  • Europe Day: "Brexit can't take this away from us"

    To mark this year's Europe Day, we spoke with people around the country about why - despite Brexit - they are still European.

    Sally, a European Movement member, took time out to speak to us about why she believes that the UK will one day return to its place at the heart of Europe.

    "When my mother fled to the UK from Germany," Sally told us, "she was welcomed and given the opportunity to build a life here. She took this country into her heart, starting a family and giving decades of service to the NHS.

    "There are so many more stories like mine, of families, relationships and careers that have been able to flourish thanks to the openness between Britain and the rest of Europe. We can't and won't let Brexit take all this away from us. I believe in taking down walls, not putting them up.

    "I know there are hundreds of thousands more people, up and down the country, who still hold strong to European values and believe in friendship and cooperation across borders."

    Watch her story here:

    Another one of those stories is the story of Gui and Leo, two Portuguese citizens living in the UK, who had to overcome the difficulties and fears of Brexit to be together.

    "I thought it was really a more progressive country and open," said Gui, "and Brexit made me think it's more closed. If we have a family and our kids want to move or study abroad, then this is something we will really have to think about."

    "It made me think that maybe we are not welcome here," Leo added, "We want to keep dreaming."

    "It's insane, how many cultures you have here in the UK. What European Movement is doing is really important for British and European society."

    Watch their story in full here:

    So this Europe Day, let's celebrate our European identity together.

    If you have a European Movement pin badge, wear it proudly. Share why you're #StillEuropean on social media, or by starting a conversation with people you meet today.