The Mail on Sunday

Muddy hell!

Glasto lament of festival fans who, er, forgot to vote

- By Nick Constable

YOUNG people overwhelmi­ngly supported Britain remaining in the EU – and many now complain they have been betrayed by the Brexit-backing older generation.

But how many young adults actually voted in the referendum?

Among the revellers at Glastonbur­y festival this weekend, some simply forgot to cast their ballot.

In a straw poll of 50 festival-goers aged 18 to 30, 29 said they had voted Remain – but 21 admitted they did not vote at all.

Some claimed they had missed the deadline to apply for a postal vote or forgotten to send one off, while others blamed the authoritie­s for not embracing online voting.

Ashlee Waton, 22, from Edinburgh, said: ‘I would have voted In. Now I feel guilty about not voting. The system is part of the problem. Younger people think and do things online, not on paper.’ Rachael Burns, 24, from Glasgow, agreed. ‘I just can’t believe what’s happened,’ she said. ‘I so wish I’d voted.’

Their friend Jack Whittam, 26, from Reading, insisted he had planned to vote Remain but failed to send off his postal ballot in time. ‘My mum agreed to do a proxy vote but then I forgot the paperwork,’ he said. ‘It’s a dreadful result all round.’

The Mail on Sunday only found one young Brexit supporter, and she too had failed to cast her ballot.

Sarah Gillibrand, a 19-year-old media and business student from Liverpool, felt Britain could emulate America, which ‘isn’t doing too badly’. She said: ‘I was told there would be a polling station at Glaston- bury. I brought along my polling card only to find there wasn’t one.

‘If younger people are to engage with politics there has to be reform of the system so that it’s possible to vote online.’

The Glastonbur­y survey echoes the findings of a nationwide poll carried out by YouGov on the day of the referendum. This showed young adults were far less likely to vote than the older generation, even though the outcome would affect them for many years to come. Only 73 per cent of the 18 to 24-year-olds questioned said they were certain to vote or had already done so, compared with 86 per cent of pensioners. The overall turnout was actually 72 per cent.

There are no official turnout figures on voter age for Thursday’s referendum, but research suggests just 43 per cent of 18 to 24-year-olds took part in the 2015 General Election.

 ??  ?? OUT AND ABOUT: Non-voter Sarah Gillibrand, 19, at Glastonbur­y festival
OUT AND ABOUT: Non-voter Sarah Gillibrand, 19, at Glastonbur­y festival

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