The Sunday Guardian

A chastening Canterbury tale for British PM: Young inflict revenge

Some youths may also have taken revenge on their parents and grandparen­ts for supporting Brexit.

- MARTINNE GELLER & ROBIN GILLHAM CANTERBURY, ENGLAND REUTERS

In an election full of nasty shocks for Britain’s governing Conservati­ve Party, none was more surprising than its first defeat in Canterbury since the constituen­cy was created in 1918. But the story behind the swing to the opposition Labour Party in this quiet corner of England, forever associated with The Canterbury Tales of Middle Ages poet Geoffrey Chaucer, helps explain why the Conservati­ves lost their parliament­ary majority. Young voters in the historic cathedral and university city appear, like elsewhere, to have taken revenge on Prime Minister Theresa May over what they see as her pursuit of a hard Brexit—a clean break from the European Union’s single market. Many turned in frustratio­n in Thursday’s election to the opposition Labour Party which, led by veteran leftist Jeremy Corbyn, favours a “softer” Brexit and has promised an end to austerity and university tuition fees. Conservati­ve Julian Brazier lost the seat he had held for three decades to Labour’s Rosie Duffield— by 187 votes. He had won the previous election by a huge margin, with 42.9% of votes to Labour’s 24.5%.

“Everyone who voted Labour did an excellent job. The youth vote was incredible. I’m ecstatic,” said 19-year-old Toby French, who is studying politics and internatio­nal relations at the University of Kent, which has a Canterbury campus. He had initially planned to vote Conservati­ve but said he was put off by May’s Brexit plans, what he saw as the party’s arrogance and a feeling he was being taken for granted. “I voted with my heart and my head. I didn’t feel Theresa May and the local Conservati­ve representa­tive for Canterbury were up to the job. They were outdated. Brexit negotiatio­ns will suffer with a Conservati­ve government,” French said.

Some youths may also have taken revenge on their parents and grandparen­ts for supporting Brexit— support for leaving the EU was much higher among older generation­s in the referendum a year ago on whether Britain should leave the EU.

Data on how the different age groups voted and turnout among each generation is not yet available, but a Labour source said the party’s polling “suggested that young people were coming out in significan­tly larger numbers”.

Malia Bouattia, president of the National Union of Students, said early reports suggested 72% of 18 to 24-yearolds had voted. “Without a doubt, this 2017 General Election will ... be recalled as the event that captured the imaginatio­n of a new generation of young people who announced their return to the electoral stage in a way not seen in decades,” said Professor Matt Henn, an expert in young people and politics at Nottingham Trent University.

“As the country moves into the next Brexit phase in 10 days’ time, any new government will need to ensure that they keep a watchful eye on a new youth voting block which has flexed its muscles and who have seen that their participat­ion in elections can make a real difference.”

There was also a big swing in the northern London constituen­cy, or voting district, of Southgate where Labour’s Bambos Charalambo­us won 24,989 votes to oust Conservati­ve David Burrowes by 4,355 votes. The Labour vote was up nearly 13% on the previous election in 2015 and the Conservati­ve vote was down 7%. In the EU referendum, voters in Southgate had voted strongly to stay in the EU, with 62% backing remain and 38% leave though Burrowes had campaigned to leave.

“I think after Brexit I was so angry with what I saw as the older generation selling us out. My generation are going to have to deal with the consequenc­es, not them,” said Marcus Hawley, a 21-yearold student who voted for Labour. “I’m happy that May hasn’t got the result she needed, hopefully this will stop her going along with a hard Brexit which will ruin this country. When I see older people voting for the Tories (Conservati­ves) or Brexit I see completely different values. They want to send this country back 50 years but I want us to go forward into the future not backwards.”

Some young voters said Labour had campaigned better than the Conservati­ves on social media. May’s lack of popularity among young people was also highlighte­d by the popularity of a song which shot up the pop charts labelling May a liar. Hitting out at government spending cuts, “Liar Liar GE2017” by Captain SKA stitched together samples of May’s speeches with a chorus of “She’s a liar liar, no you can’t trust her”. “We all know politician­s like telling lies / Big ones, little ones, porky pies / Saying they’re strong and stable, won’t disguise / We’re still being taken for a ride,” reads one verse.

 ??  ?? Toby French voted Labour.
Toby French voted Labour.

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