Over 80% of 16 to 24-year-olds would vote to rejoin the EU
Over 80% of 16 to 24-year-olds would vote to rejoin the EU
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s1962a

Original Poster:

7,217 posts

184 months

Thursday
quotequote all
https://www.itv.com/news/2026-02-19/over-80-of-16-...

The next G.E. will be interesting if this comes up as a policy for any party.


z4RRSchris

12,301 posts

201 months

Thursday
quotequote all
apart from historically they dont really turn out to vote..

88% of oldies v 62% of kids




S600BSB

7,292 posts

128 months

Thursday
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Surprised it’s not higher tbh.

Skodillac

8,778 posts

52 months

Thursday
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You'll have heard of the third biggest party in the Commons, the LibDems? It's pretty much their policy already, with a few interim steps to take before full re-join.

Timothy Bucktu

16,572 posts

222 months

Thursday
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Skodillac said:
You'll have heard of the third biggest party in the Commons, the LibDems? It's pretty much their policy already, with a few interim steps to take before full re-join.
Well, it's not surprising. The Lib Dems can't be bothering themselves with such things as running the country if (God forbid) they ever got into power. Much better to farm it off to the EU bureaucrats

bloomen

9,283 posts

181 months

Thursday
quotequote all
s1962a said:
The next G.E. will be interesting if this comes up as a policy for any party.
Labour is still terrified of saying it fully out loud, though the people who'd be most narked by this are all dead or will never vote for them again anyway.

I expect any non psycho fascist government will slowly ease towards it, and the EU will nudge the odd door open so everyone can still pretend the status quo remains.

king arthur

7,586 posts

283 months

Thursday
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Labour are trying to float the idea of rejoining the customs union. But surely this would mean tearing up any trade deals we have with the rest of the world? Whilst rejoining the single market without the CU would not?

bloomen

9,283 posts

181 months

Thursday
quotequote all
king arthur said:
Labour are trying to float the idea of rejoining the customs union. But surely this would mean tearing up any trade deals we have with the rest of the world? Whilst rejoining the single market without the CU would not?
Haven't they already said it's not a goer because of the other deals? Not that they seem to have achieved very much.

I expect within the coming years we'll see less trade friction, some sort of youth movement, more dedicated defence cooperation and not a vast amount beyond that.



z4RRSchris

12,301 posts

201 months

Thursday
quotequote all
youth movement is the easy win, mirrors agreements we have in place already with other countries and will solve the shortage of cheap labour we have in hospitality etc.

i dont think many will care if kids from the EU come to work.

Ashfordian

2,390 posts

111 months

Thursday
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It must just be a coincidence that we have this thread running concurrently which highlights that large chunks of this age group have no idea how the real world actually works - https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

And anyone taking this age groups views seriously just looks desperate and unhinged

bloomen

9,283 posts

181 months

Thursday
quotequote all
Ashfordian said:
And anyone taking this age groups views seriously just looks desperate and unhinged
If I were a young person today, and I'm very glad I'm not, I would not be impressed with what those senior to me had plopped out into my lap.

And they get bigger and older eventually.

Chris Type R

8,754 posts

271 months

Thursday
quotequote all
Skodillac said:
You'll have heard of the third biggest party in the Commons, the LibDems? It's pretty much their policy already, with a few interim steps to take before full re-join.
Aren't they still tarnished with 'betraying students over tuition fees' ?

Rivenink

4,286 posts

128 months

Thursday
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Timothy Bucktu said:
Skodillac said:
You'll have heard of the third biggest party in the Commons, the LibDems? It's pretty much their policy already, with a few interim steps to take before full re-join.
Well, it's not surprising. The Lib Dems can't be bothering themselves with such things as running the country if (God forbid) they ever got into power. Much better to farm it off to the EU bureaucrats
This doesn't really work as an argument.

The UK were in the EU before. Setting and following the regulations.

The Euro-sceptics told us that once free of the EU-regulations, life would be better. We'd "take back control" and enter a golden age.

And enough people believed that lie, and we exited.

What those people didn't really think about was that to sell into the EU single market, our businesses still needed to follow those regulations. And because we became an external party, we also had a bunch more regulations to follow to sell to them.

So rather than getting more control, we got less.

The UK is economically and diplomatically weaker, all thanks to the Brexit con men and the boomers who believed their false promises.

MrBogSmith

4,925 posts

56 months

Thursday
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Ashfordian said:
And anyone taking this age groups views seriously just looks desperate and unhinged
How about the more general polling about Brexit regret?


JoshSm

3,255 posts

59 months

Thursday
quotequote all
z4RRSchris said:
youth movement is the easy win, mirrors agreements we have in place already with other countries and will solve the shortage of cheap labour we have in hospitality etc.

i dont think many will care if kids from the EU come to work.
Seems we have plenty of local youth unemployment to clear first, and given they're all due the same level of NMW the imports won't be any cheaper.

Some of the EU was very keen on the idea as it exported their local youth unemployment but now we've caught up we dont need them.

Leon R

3,680 posts

118 months

Thursday
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MrBogSmith said:
Ashfordian said:
And anyone taking this age groups views seriously just looks desperate and unhinged
How about the more general polling about Brexit regret?

Is there ever a chart that shows a decision being looked on more favourably as time goes on.

Seems unlikely.

MrBogSmith

4,925 posts

56 months

Thursday
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Leon R said:
MrBogSmith said:
Ashfordian said:
And anyone taking this age groups views seriously just looks desperate and unhinged
How about the more general polling about Brexit regret?

Is there ever a chart that shows a decision being looked on more favourably as time goes on.

Seems unlikely.
Probably if the decision delivers what it promised and wasn’t harmful.

Ashfordian

2,390 posts

111 months

Thursday
quotequote all
Rivenink said:
The UK is economically and diplomatically weaker all thanks to the Brexit con men and the boomers who believed their false promises.
Still spouting the same old claptrap 10 years after the referendum took place. This did not and has not happened!

MrBogSmith

4,925 posts

56 months

Thursday
quotequote all
Ashfordian said:
Rivenink said:
The UK is economically and diplomatically weaker all thanks to the Brexit con men and the boomers who believed their false promises.
Still spouting the same old claptrap 10 years after the referendum took place. This did not and has not happened!
It s measurably the case for the former.

See the Brexit thread for details or have a look at the work from the OBR, BoE and everyone else.

Sway

33,391 posts

216 months

Thursday
quotequote all
bloomen said:
king arthur said:
Labour are trying to float the idea of rejoining the customs union. But surely this would mean tearing up any trade deals we have with the rest of the world? Whilst rejoining the single market without the CU would not?
Haven't they already said it's not a goer because of the other deals? Not that they seem to have achieved very much.

I expect within the coming years we'll see less trade friction, some sort of youth movement, more dedicated defence cooperation and not a vast amount beyond that.
Going into a customs union would tear up any other deals. We'd have to subsume into the EU's external trade policy.

Thing is, it wouldn't change anything at the border in terms of inspections...

It's hilarious, and frankly horrifically saddening, that even after a decade people are still willing to put forward sincerely held and absolute opinions whilst demonstrating they still have absolutely zero clue what they're talking about. And they're certainly not people aged 18-24.