The March for Europe, July 2016 The first March for Europe took place in London on 2 July 2016, shortly after the Brexit referendum on 23 June 2016, and was attended by thousands of people.
The March for Europe, September 2016 The second March for Europe took place in London on 3 September 2016 and was attended by thousands of people. It was one of a number of events to take place on the day, including rallies in Edinburgh and Birmingham. Pro-Brexit demonstrators staged a counter-protest at one location along the marching route.
Unite for Europe, March 2017 The Unite for Europe march, which coincided with the 60th anniversary of the signing of the
Treaty of Rome, was held in London on 25 March 2017, and the
Independent reported that police estimated 100,000 people attended.
People's March for Europe, September 2017 The People's March Ltd came into being in July 2017, to help ensure that a march planned for 9 September 2017 in London went ahead. The event began with a march from Hyde Park and was followed by speeches in Parliament Square, emceed by British adventurer
Graham Hughes. The event was attended by thousands of people and was part of a series of protests dubbed "the Autumn of discontent". Over 50,000 people took to the streets under the banner "Unite, Rethink, Reject Brexit" marching from Hyde Park to Parliament Square followed by a rally with speakers from the remain movement and from across the political spectrum and received broad media coverage.
StopBrexit Manchester, October 2017 march in October 2017 The StopBrexit Manchester march was held in All Saints Park, Manchester, on 1 October 2017, to coincide with the Conservative Party conference. The event consisted of a rally followed by a march through central Manchester, and finishing with a street party organised by local pro-EU groups. An estimated 30,000 people took part in this event.
StopBrexit Leeds, March 2018 , March 2018 The StopBrexit Leeds march was held on 24 March 2018 in Leeds. The march assembled at The Headrow in central Leeds and ended with a rally at The Headrow, with thousands of people reported to have attended. Leeds for Europe organised the march.
People's Vote march, June 2018 On 23 June 2018, the second anniversary of the EU referendum,
People's Vote organised a march and protest from
Trafalgar Square to
Parliament Square in Central London. Speakers included
Liberal Democrat leader
Vince Cable,
Green Party co-leader
Caroline Lucas, Labour's
David Lammy and the Conservatives'
Anna Soubry. The organisers said that at least 100,000 people attended the march. A smaller pro-Brexit march was held in London on the same date. The People's Vote march was not designed to reverse the result of the referendum, but to hold a
public vote on the final terms of the UK's EU exit deal. The organisers said Brexit was "not a done deal" and Cable said "Brexit is not inevitable. Brexit can be stopped." The Labour leader
Jeremy Corbyn was criticised for not attending the march.
"People's Vote" march, September 2018 Thousands marched through Liverpool on 23 September 2018 during the annual Labour Party conference in protest against leaving the EU.
Bin Brexit in Brum, September 2018 Another march against Brexit took place in Birmingham starting from Victoria Square on 30 September 2018 during the annual Conservative Party conference.
People's Vote March for the Future, October 2018 On 20 October 2018, People's Vote organised the second march called ''The People's Vote March for the Future''. Organisers claimed that 700,000 people attended the march jointly organised by People's Vote and the UK newspaper
The Independent, although police were unable to verify the number. A later estimate, presented by the
Greater London Authority and published in
The Daily Telegraph, reported the number to be 250,000. The aim of the march was to secure a vote on the final Brexit deal. The march organisers stated: "Whether you voted leave or remain, nobody voted to make this country worse off, to harm jobs, to damage the NHS, to affect the future of millions of young people, or to make this country more divided. The more the shape of the final Brexit deal becomes clear, the more it is clear that it will do nothing to improve social justice, reduce inequality, increase our standard of living, or create a better future for future generations." A number of celebrities, including
Delia Smith,
Ian McEwan, Sir
Patrick Stewart and
Charlie Mullins, stated that they would fund coach travel to London, to enable those wishing to attend the march to do so. If the organisers' stated estimate of the attendance was correct, then the event was the second-largest protest of the 21st century in the UK, after the
"Stop the War" anti-Iraq War march in 2003.
Put It to the People, March 2019 The third People's Vote march, also known as the
Put It to the People march, took place in London on 23 March 2019. The main purpose of the march was to call for a
second referendum. The organisers suggested that a million people took part; independent verification by experts in
crowd estimation put the figure at between 312,000 and 400,000.
March for Change, July 2019 Another anti-Brexit march took place in London on 20 July 2019, with the message “No to Boris, yes to Europe”.
Let Us Be Heard, October 2019 The fourth People's Vote march, again in London and this time known as the
Let Us Be Heard march, took place on 19 October 2019, thereby coinciding with the
planned vote in the House of Commons on
Boris Johnson's revised withdrawal agreement. Organisers estimated a million people attended the march, whose purpose was to demand a confirmatory referendum on the terms of withdrawal. == Joint campaigning ==