Heartbroken By Brexit? Sadiq Khan Thinks You Should Be Able To Keep Your EU Citizenship

But only Londoners.

Londoners who are heartbroken over Brexit should be allowed to keep their EU citizenship, Sadiq Khan has suggested.

Ahead of a visit to Brussels on Tuesday, the mayor of London urged the government to allow all British nationals to have ‘associate citizenship’ of the EU.

This would allow British citizens to keep many of the rights they held before Brexit, including the right to move freely between EU member states.

Khan said: “Like so many Londoners, I am heartbroken that we are no longer a member of the European Union, but that doesn’t mean our country’s future can’t be closely linked with the rest of Europe.

“The prime minister says his job is to bring the country together and move us forward and I cannot think of a better way of reconciling the differences between British voters who wanted to leave, and the millions of Londoners and British nationals who still feel and want to be European.

“There would be support from millions of Londoners and British nationals who are devastated they are losing their rights as EU citizens.

“As the UK and EU start their next phase of negotiations, I want this issue of associate citizenship to be at the heart of talks about our future relationship.”

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London Mayor British Sadiq Khan speaks on stage in Parliament Square in central London on October 19, 2019, during a rally by the People's Vote organisation.
ISABEL INFANTES via Getty Images

Khan will meet the EU’s chief Brexit negotiator, Michel Barnier, and the president of the European Parliament, David Sassoli, during Tuesday’s visit to the Belgium capital.

The idea of European citizenship has been backed by the former chairman of the European Parliament’s Brexit steering group, Guy Verhofstadt.

He said: “The Maastricht Treaty created the concept of ‘European citizenship’ and I am in favour of using this now as a basis for people who want to keep their link with Europe.

“It is the first time in the history of our union that a member state leaves, but it is not because the UK government wanted exit that individual citizens have to lose their connection with the continent.”