Votes at 16 is a campaign in the United Kingdom which argues in favour of the reduction of the voting age to 16 for all public elections. The campaign espouses several principles in favour of lowering the voting age.
The Scottish National Party, who are currently in government in Scotland, have officially called for the voting age to be lowered to 16 and lowered the voting age to 16 for the referendum on Scottish Independence. However, when the SNP put forward a motion in the Scottish Parliament for a second independence referendum on the 28 March 2017, the party omitted the right for 16 and 17 year-olds to be able to vote in it. This led to the Scottish Green Party putting forward an amendment to the proposal to allow those age 16 and 17 to be able to vote in a second Scottish independence referendum. The proposal for a second independence referendum, along with the amendment to lower the voting age for it, was passed by the majority of MSPs in the Scottish Parliament.
Since 2009, the UK Youth Parliament has held an annual debate at the Houses of Parliament led by the Speaker of the House of Commons. Members of Youth Parliament debate five issues chosen by ‘Make Your Mark’, a ballot of young people from across the UK, and vote to decide which two issues should become the UKYP priority campaigns for the year ahead. Votes at 16 is a reoccurring issue that has been selected as one of the top five topics multiple times since 2011, the most recent being in 2018, with over 80,000 11–18-year-olds voting in favour of the campaign. Out of the five times Votes at 16 has been brought to debate, it has been chosen as a UKYP priority campaign a total of four times and is currently the lead UK wide campaign for 2019.
On 3 April 2019, a Westminster Hall Debate was held on the issue, put forward by Jim McMahon. Jim McMahon MP, who in 2017 tabled a Private Members’ Bill on votes at 16, said: “Less than 50 years ago, 18, 19 and 20-year-olds were denied the right to vote Our democracy and our franchise have always been evolving.” He later added that it was “scandalous” MPs have not voted on the issue. Minister for the Constitution, Chloe Smith, said it would not be given further consideration as lowering the age would break the Conservative Party manifesto.
The All Party Parliamentary Group on Votes at 16 is a group of cross-party Members of Parliament allowing parliamentarians to meet to discuss a lower voting age, first established in March 2018. The purpose of the APPG is to bring together key voices from across Parliament to listen to evidence on the case for votes at 16, and to present this evidence to the Government. The current APPG Chair is Danielle Rowley. Current Vice-Chairs are Peter Bottomley, Vicky Foxcroft and Norman Lamb. Additional members of the group include Nicky Morgan, John Lamont, Jim McMahon, Jo Stevens, Paul Tyler and Hugh Gaffney. The APPG's secretariat is the British Youth Council. At the APPG's AGM held on Tuesday 2 April 2019, the Group published a reflecting on progress over the previous year.