I understand your keeness for organising and taking action, to protect, workers rights and environment.
But we were never prevented from doing that inside the EU.
In fact the EU gave us more protection for workers, environmental, and indeed human rights .
The EU funded some of our projects around cooperative farmers organisations, research, and peer to peer learning opportunities.
All that has gone now.
As well as having all the restrictions on our moving around to work study and live.
I don't see that we've got anything back that makes up for even a fraction of those losses.
To me, and many other precarious workers, the EU protections were virtually meaningless. If we are going to resist zero-hours culture and build better working ways it has to be on the ground. When you say 'the EU gave us' things then I worry, because the EU might not always give us anything. It looks liberal enough now, but I think it is moving to the right far more inexorably than the UK population as a whole. We have a tradition of working class resistance, and I feel it is growing. How it shapes is up to us of course.
The environmental changes we need now are fundamental. I don't think the EU will do more than manage them corporately - such as debt-model funding for green power projects in developing countries. The power lobbies are just too big for us to reach, and attempting to out-lobby them risks losing our way within their frame. Energy is more expensive. Is that a bad thing? Perhaps we can do without a lot of it. I know there is a lot of hype about how terrible it is to tell folk to wear jumpers to keep warm, but this is how I grew up. It's not that terrible. What gives Europeans a right to daily showers when people across the world are getting water from a communal tap? We are too privileged. Let us please understand that.
Erasmus scholarships were a big loss, but peer-to-peer sharing still happens. The first co-ops came about before the EU, in response to need. Funding can be great, but it can also channel organisations along accepted routes rather than more radical ones.