• last year
Belgium and Germany have joined Austria, Greece and Malta in allowing 16 and 17-year-old to vote in the European elections.
Transcript
00:00 This time next year, these secondary school goers won't just use their pens for exams,
00:07 but also for voting.
00:09 In the 2024 European elections, Belgium and Germany join Austria, Greece and Malta in
00:16 allowing 16-year-olds to vote.
00:18 Pupils here are informed and motivated.
00:20 "I think it's a good idea because we're going to be adults soon and we have to take
00:27 care of our own lives, so we should give our opinion."
00:30 "I think it's a really good idea because it means that we can actually change what
00:35 we want to change and so the matters that we find important, we can actually have a voice
00:40 and so vote for parties or people that we think would carry these values.
00:44 For example, in our class, climate change is quite important, or women's rights, and
00:48 so people can actually use their voice to further these ideas."
00:52 Lowering the voting age means that 270,000 young people in Belgium will be able to cast
00:57 their ballot, the goal of many youth organisations here for years, a change they want to see
01:03 all over the continent.
01:05 Young people should be heard, and not just seen, they argue.
01:09 "It's true that some young people think that their voices and their votes don't matter,
01:14 and that's why we need a bigger political change.
01:17 Voting at 16 is a part of that change, it's one step to getting there, but we recognise
01:21 we need some more radical changes if we need young people to feel truly engaged in our
01:25 democracies.
01:26 That means having more young people in political parties, having more young people in positions
01:31 of political power, and having young people's opinions taken seriously in our politics."
01:36 But the big question now, will young people get registered for these elections and take
01:40 time out to go to vote, even in countries like Belgium, where voting is mandatory?
01:46 Previous EU elections show voter turnout among youth is dismally low.
01:50 The goal now is to change this tendency.
01:53 "And of course for us, the institution, the parliament, but maybe this should be even
01:58 bigger than just the parliament, this is a priority for many reasons, and maybe the first
02:03 reason is that these are probably the elections that are more clearly shaping future for these
02:09 new generations.
02:11 Because at the end of the day, what will happen at the European level will probably have a
02:16 bigger and a longer impact than national decisions, let's say year by year or in the short term."
02:22 Back in 2019, only 42% of first-time voters actually voted.
02:28 And only time will tell if they're motivated next year.
02:32 All eyes on politicians to see how they flirt with this generation.
02:36 Maeve McMahan, Euronews, Brussels.
02:39 [SWOOSH]

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