10 Years After "Brexit" Vote, Majority of Britons Say Leaving European Union Was a Mistake
10 Articles
10 Articles
A majority of Britons ranging from 53% to 58% acknowledge that Brexit was a mistake when, ten years ago, the ‘yes' exit from the bloc was voted by a small majority of 51.89% (a turnout that reached 72.2%. Among young people between the ages of 18 and 34 this majority reaches 68%. The current generation of Britons who were not yet ten years old to speak on the subject believes that Brexit failed, with the majority demanding a new vote to rejoin t…
A considerable part of the British people are still wondering whether the decision to leave the European Union (EU), as a result of the referendum held 10 years ago, was correct or not. A recent survey by the YouGov Institute showed that 56% of respondents claim it was a mistake. And 62% consider it a failure. This change of opinion led some commentators to imagine new expressions inspired by the term "Brexit" to describe the opposite phenomenon…
Zoom In: Growing Calls to Rejoin the EU 10 Years After Brexit. Half of Britons Say Let's Go Back. Export Decline and Political Turmoil Continue After Brexit; GDP Estimated to Decrease by Up to 8%. Ten years after the Brexit referendum on the UK's withdrawal from the European Union, arguments for Brexit failure and calls to rejoin the EU are emerging in the UK.
RECIT - Polls seem to show that a majority of British people regret a choice that has not improved things, both in terms of the cost of living and immigration, but a full return to the EU is not envisaged.
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Bias Distribution
- 83% of the sources lean Right
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