Youngest MP Mhairi Black calls for teenage votes in EU referendum
The UK's youngest MP has called for 16 and 17-year-olds to be given the vote in the forthcoming referendum on European Union (EU) membership.
Mhairi Black said the remarkable'' contribution of young people during Scotland's independence referendum demonstrated they should be allowed to play a full role in the debate.
The 21-year-old SNP MP spoke out in the wake of a House of Lords vote to amend the EU Referendum Bill to allow 16 and 17-year-olds to participate in the in/out poll.
The move would see some 1.5 million extra teenagers eligible to vote in the referendum which Prime Minister David Cameron is committed to holding by the end of 2017.
The UK Government has said it will seek to overturn the amendment when the Bill returns to the Commons.
The Paisley and Renfrewshire South MP said: We know that those who get into the habit of voting early are more likely to vote often for life.
It is also important that those who will have to live longest with the decision on whether or not to stay in the European Union have their say.
The SNP has always argued that the EU referendum should meet the gold standard set by Scotland's independence referendum, where 16 and 17-year-olds were allowed to vote and participate in such an important, democratic decision for the first time.
We hope the vote in the House of Lords will force the Tory Government to reconsider their opposition and hold a more emocratic debate.
It is right that 16 and 17-year-olds have the vote and it would be wrong for the UK Government to rush into the referendum and deny them their democratic say.''
A Cabinet Office spokesman said: The age of 18, not 16, is widely recognised as the age at which one becomes an adult.
Full citizenship rights - from drinking, to betting, to voting - should be gained at adulthood. The majority of the public do not support this change.
Recent polling shows more 16-to-18-year olds oppose it than support it, as does a majority of those over 18.
It is inappropriate to try to change the nation's electoral franchise through the back door of this Bill.
The House of Commons has voted on three occasions in recent months against dropping the voting age from 18.
The Government will re-affirm this clear position when the Bill returns to the elected Chamber and will seek to overturn this latest amendment from the Lords.''