Our Future Our Choice


Our Future Our Choice was a British pro-European Union advocacy group for young people.

History

The Twitter account for OFOC was created 19 October 2017. OFOC was incorporated as a company on 19 February 2018. Its four founding members were Femi Oluwole, Calum Millbank-Murphy, Lara Spirit and Will Dry.

Activities

OFOC has heavily criticised the government's approach to negotiating Brexit. In July 2018 it protested outside Chequers during a cabinet summit, holding a banner which read 'Your Brexit Deal Screws Our Future: Explain Yourselves'. In June 2018 OFOC and For our Future's Sake unfurled a banner which read "Stop backing Brexit" at a festival event organised by the Labour Party nicknamed "JezFest" after the party's leader Jeremy Corbyn.
In the same month OFOC produced a host of billboard advertising targeting frontbench Labour MPs, accusing them of "being in the pockets" of hardline Brexiteers. The adverts were similar to those produced by the Conservative Party for the 2015 general election which suggested that the then Labour leader, Ed Miliband, was "in the pocket" of the former leader of the Scottish National Party, Alex Salmond.
This has led left wing commentators such as Novara Media’s Aaron Bastani and journalist and author Paul Mason to question the group's anti-Corbyn stance and where the group gets its funding from. Left wing outlets such as the Red Robin have claimed that OFOC is funded by centre right donors. OFOC's website states that it is "powered by: Best for Britain, Open Britain, and The European Movement". OFOC have advocated the view that Corbynite radical change would be inhibited by Brexit due to a lack of political bandwidth and the potential negative economic consequences.
OFOC more recently has hosted, along with FFS, a number of "Parliament Takeover" events where a large group of young people visit Parliament's central lobby and meet with their local MPs to discuss a people's vote.
OFOC's founders are regular speakers at anti-Brexit events up and down the country. This includes the People's Vote march and more recently the Put It To The People march on the 23 March 2019. The People's Vote campaign claim the latter was attended by over 1 million people, although independent fact-checkers actually suggest between 312,000 and 400,000.