One of the hardest tasks faced by the ‘Remain’ campaign in the forthcoming European referendum is trying to communicate all those ways in which our membership of the EU makes things better and easier, but which have been part of our daily lives for such a long time that we risk taking them for granted.
I’m going to give this a go – in the manner of a primary school student coming back after a break – by telling you about what I got up to on my holidays.
Last week, my wife and I went to Scotland for a wonderful, relaxing Easter break. My Facebook friends can attest to the smugness of the photos that followed. What is less hard to spot or quantify is how much of our holiday was affected by the UK’s EU membership. Sounds a bit tenuous? Stay with me.
Let’s start with the fact that we are both British citizens working in Belgium. That alone is to do with our EU membership – as UK citizens, we have the right to work in any of the other 27 Member States.
We are then free to travel around the European Union on holiday, needing nothing more than our passports and tickets. It’s easy to forget that things aren’t always that simple. Travel somewhere outside the EU and you’ll often have to apply (and pay) for a visa several weeks in advance.
Then there’s the fact that, for the week that we were on holiday, both of us continued to get paid by our respective employers. You probably also get paid leave, and would expect to be entitled to it as part of your job’s terms and conditions. But you might not know that the right to that paid leave stems from the EU: it’s the Working Time Directive that guarantees 20 days of paid holiday a year, and that made millions of British workers’ lives better when it was introduced in 1993.
For our holiday, my wife and I were originally going to fly to Edinburgh. After all, the flights were pretty reasonably priced – no doubt in part thanks to the EU having put an end to the days where only certain airlines were allowed to fly to certain countries, meaning they could charge whatever they wanted.
In the end, our flights were cancelled, so we switched to travelling by train. We were entitled to a full refund of the cancelled flight. Again, this isn’t in UK law – it’s in an EU Regulation which guarantees compensation and assistance to people whose flights are cancelled or delayed for a long period of time.
We stayed in Edinburgh for two nights, before going up to the Highlands, where we stayed in the breathtakingly beautiful Glen Affric just west of Loch Ness. It’s hard to think of a better place to get away from everything – stunning, remote, untouched wilderness. And the reason that it’s untouched is because it is a ‘Special Protection Area’, as designated by – yep, you guessed it – the EU. Glen Affric looks as beautiful as it does because the Habitats Directive and the Birds Directive say it has to.
None of this may seem like much on its own, and most of it would pass you by if you didn’t know to look for it.
But now try to imagine a Europe in which my wife and I found it much harder to work overseas in the first place; where if we wanted to take off a week of holiday we had to do it without being paid; where we had to fork out money and time to get a visa to go to a neighbouring country; where we lost a load more money on an expensive flight which was then cancelled with no prospect of a refund; and where when we finally got to our beautiful rural retreat the whole thing had been so overdeveloped that all that lovely wildlife had long since departed.
That may all sound quite apocalyptic, but it’s EU membership that guarantees all of those things. In a country that’s been a member since 1975, there are many of us who have never known a life outside the EU. But just because that membership is sometimes invisible to us, don’t think that it isn’t there – making life a little better, and a little easier, in thousands of imperceptible ways.