Britons Regret Brexit Decision, Says Poll
For the first time since Britain voted to
leave the European Union, more people now believe that the decision was a
mistake, an opinion poll released Thursday said.
Asked “in
hindsight, was Britain right or wrong to vote to leave the EU?”, the YouGov
poll in The Times newspaper found that 45 percent said wrong (up two), while 43
percent said right (down three).
“This is the first
time that more people have said the referendum came out with the wrong result,
and suggests that the issue still divides the country,” The Times said.
In the June 2016 referendum, 52 percent voted for Britain to leave
the EU.
YouGov found some
43 percent favour a so-called “hard Brexit” where Britain leaves the EU
completely, while 36 percent backed a “soft Brexit” where Britain remains
inside the European single market and retains open-borders EU immigration.
Some 39 percent said they thought Brexit would leave Britain
economically worse off; 28 percent said they thought Britain would be better
off; while 18 percent said it would make no difference.
YouGov surveyed 1,590 British adults online on Tuesday and
Wednesday.
The poll compares
with one released April 16 that said support for Brexit had hit a five-month
high, with 55 percent backing Britain’s exit from the EU. That survey, by
research company Orb International, was published in the Sunday Telegraph
newspaper.
Conservative Prime Minister Theresa May has called a snap general
election for June 8 in a bid to strengthen her majority in parliament heading
into the Brexit negotiations with Brussels.
In YouGov’s
general election voting intention poll, the Conservatives were on 45 percent
(down three on April 20-21), Labour 29 percent (up four), the Liberal Democrats
10 percent (down two) and UKIP on seven percent (up two).
Asked who would
make the best prime minister, 48 percent said May (down six), 18 percent said
opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn (up three), while 33 percent said they
were not sure.
Asked what the top general election issues were, four main themes
emerged: Brexit (64 percent), health (47 percent), immigration (36 percent) and
the economy (35 percent).