Disagree. EASA is the licensing authority for the European Union, not for Europe. There are 23 European countries that aren't members of the EU, although some are members of EASA by virtue of other alliances with the EU such as membership of the EFTA, but they do not hold any voting rights. There is nothing to stop a Brit from gaining an EASA licence but unless they hold EU citizenship/residency then they do not have the automatic right to work in the EU. The distinction I'm making is that 'Europe' and 'European' are geographical definitions, not political.