What motivates you and your work?
I’m a passionate activist for young people’s rights and that’s been my life for almost a decade. It’s covered most of my childhood, teenage years and now my adult life. It might sound corny, but fighting for what felt right has always been at the heart of everything I do.
It didn’t come from some grand philosophical quest for justice. Back when I was 14 or 15, it was much more concrete. In high school, my classmates got graded not on what they knew, but on their behaviour. Students over 18 weren’t allowed to leave campus outside breaks, even though the law said they could. These were rights we had, even sometimes explicitly protected, that just weren’t being honoured. That sense of injustice never sat right with me; I felt it right here in my chest. Eventually I realised there’s a name for turning that feeling into action: activism. Sometimes it’s energising, sometimes overwhelming, but it’s always what drives me forward.
As president of the EYF, how does this role compare to your days as a grassroots activist?
I come straight out of the school students’ movement, having started in my high school in Romania, then nationally, and at European level with OBESSU. This included protests, petitions, sitting down with policymakers, presenting our demands. The EYF is in line with that: we’re mission and value-driven, and our member organisations, including national youth councils and groups representing young people right across Europe, set those priorities. Then we run with them.
The real difference at this scale is the diversity of opinions on the same issues. A common misconception is that we only cover the EU, but we follow the Council of Europe’s definition of Europe, so our scope is much broader. Perspectives can clash spectacularly, so the most challenging and rewarding part of my job is building consensus, making sure the Forum’s work captures that full spectrum, opening new doors for young voices and never pulling up the ladder behind us.
Why is it crucial to include young people in a meaningful, inclusive way?
Look at what happens when we don’t. The logic seems so obvious: decisions made today in closed rooms will shape the lives of children, teens and young adults not just now, but for decades. And yet we’re the generations with the least input on how those policies get shaped or how long they last.
When you feel those policies hitting your life and you’re unhappy, but you also know you had zero say in them, disconnection sets in. You tune out from democratic processes, institutions, politicians. That vacuum is where extremists thrive, promising “real democracy” to people who’ve never felt included. Our research at the EYF backs it up: in the last European Parliament (EP), more MEPs were named Martin than were under 30. The good news is that young people have the appetite and the willingness to be part of and create spaces where they can participate in decision-making processes.

