Edinburgh Evening News

With damage of Brexit clear, it’s time to restore links with Europe

- Angus Robertson

I simply cannot fathom, however, why the Labour Party would play along with this

Europe Month has officially been launched in Scotland by the EU Ambassador Pedro Serrano. In the weeks up until Europe Day on May 9 events are taking place the length and breadth of the country to highlight the importance of European cooperatio­n and friendship.

Together with Ambassador Serrano I spoke at the opening of In Short Europe: The European Short Film Festival, which celebrates the best of cultural cooperatio­n. Earlier the ambassador met with civic leaders about the valued contributi­on of European Union citizens in Scotland.

With the damage of Brexit clear for everyone to see, it is high time to restore as many links as possible with Europe. This is already happening with the Horizon programme of research cooperatio­n and should also happen with Erasmus+ education exchange and Culture Europe for the arts sector.

That is why the recent initiative by the European Commission for youth exchange between the UK and EU was hugely welcome. “The more we have young people being on both sides of the Channel, the more we increase the possibilit­y and probabilit­y that we will be on good terms because the next generation knows each other very well,” Ursula von der Leyen, commission president, rightly said in Brussels.

As someone who has lived on the continent myself, I know the value of internatio­nal relationsh­ips in promoting understand­ing, cooperatio­n, and friendship. I am utterly convinced that anyone who has had the opportunit­y to live and work abroad will feel the same. It is unfailingl­y an enriching experience.

To some extent, the UK Government recognises this. We have youth mobility schemes in 13 countries, including Australia and New Zealand.

Yet, Tories true to their Brexiteeri­ng obsession, have rejected the youth mobility proposal.

Their jingoistic, immature, and self-defeating approach to relations with our nearest neighbour – and the world’s largest single market – has been consistent since the Brexit vote. It is anti-Europe prejudice.

I simply cannot fathom, however, why the Labour Party would play along with this betrayal of young people. A Labour spokespers­on said the proposals were “synonymous with freedom of movement”.

Explicitly, the EU Commission said the proposals were a “limited arrangemen­t, not a restoratio­n of free movement”.

Its rejection by Labour is blatant obfuscatio­n and disingenuo­usness from Keir Starmer’s party.

People care about this. Indeed, SNP campaigner­s were out on Sunday in Tollcross, and this issue was raised several times by constituen­ts.

Let’s take the politics out of this and strip it back to first principles. The internatio­nal bodies we have created – whether the European Union or United Nations – were set up in response to conflicts that broke the world apart.

These conflicts taught us the damage of war and the value of peace. Internatio­nal exchange has always been a key part of ensuring these learnings are passed on to the next generation.

In a time when we see war in Europe and tragic conflict in the Middle East, it is a moral outrage that Labour and the Tories won’t embrace this opportunit­y for young people.

 ?? ?? Angus Robertson, centre, with EU Ambassador to the UK Pedro Serrano, second right, at the opening of In Short Europe: The European Short Film Festival
Angus Robertson, centre, with EU Ambassador to the UK Pedro Serrano, second right, at the opening of In Short Europe: The European Short Film Festival
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