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The United Kingdom is set to reduce the voting age from 18 to 16 in time for the upcoming national elections, a decision that opposition members have criticized as a tactic to shift the voter base in favor of the left.
The Labour Party-led U.K. government revealed on Thursday that individuals aged 16 and 17 will be eligible to vote as part of several “significant changes.” Additional election reforms include allowing bank cards for voter ID verification, introducing new measures to “protect against foreign political meddling and campaigner abuse,” and enforcing stricter regulations on foreign contributions to British political parties.
In a related policy document issued with the announcement, Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner highlighted that “dwindling confidence in our institutions and democracy is a pressing issue, and it falls upon the government to address this and rejuvenate our democratic framework, as past generations have done.”
Holmes accused Labour of “governing by press release” and questioned whether allowing bank cards – which do not include photographs – as a form of voter ID will undermine security measures at the ballot box.
Nigel Farage, leader of the right-wing Reform UK Party, said giving 16- and 17-year-olds the right to vote “is an attempt to rig the political system.”
“The problem with this is, not only do half of youngsters not want the vote, but they have to stay at school now until they’re 18,” Farage said in a video shared to X. “The educational establishment is full of left-wing prejudice, is full of anti-reform bias, and frankly, if 16 to 18 year olds at school are going to be able to vote, we’re going to have to make sure that our education system is teaching kids to make their own minds up and not indoctrinating them.”
The change still requires parliamentary approval but was a campaign promise by the Labour Party, which won last year’s general election and holds majority control. The next general election is in 2029.
Rayner noted that 16- and 17-year-olds can already vote in Scotland and Wales in local elections and country-level parliamentary elections. The minimum voting age for local elections in England and Northern Ireland is 18.

Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer, left, and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz hold a press conference during a visit to the Airbus factory in Stevenage, England, Thursday July 17, 2025. (Stefan Rousseau/Pool via AP)
In an opinion piece in the British newspaper “The Times,” Rayner, who was a single mother at the age of 16, said the change makes 1.6 million 16- and 17-year-olds eligible to vote in the United Kingdom, which has a population of roughly 68 million.
“This is about fairness and transparency and giving the young a stake in our country’s future, bringing them into our communities, not excluding them,” Rayner wrote. “It’s about delivering on our manifesto to commitment to secure votes at 16. But it’s also about strengthening our electoral system so that it is fit for the 21st century — because we cannot take our democracy for granted.”