POLL: Strong Majority of Brits Shrug off Second Brexit Referendum, Say Unlikely
Around two-thirds of Brits do not think a second Brexit referendum, or so-called “people’s vote,” is likely.
Around two-thirds of Brits do not think a second Brexit referendum, or so-called “people’s vote,” is likely.
More than 60 percent of Britons say a second Brexit referendum would either end in calls for a third vote, not be accepted by the public, or risk civil unrest, a poll has revealed.
CBS/YouGov polls show Republicans are in good shape to pick up U.S. Senate seats in Montana and Missouri.
The British public is overwhelmingly opposed to the Prime Minister’s plan for a “soft” Brexit and almost a third of voters are prepared to back a new, right wing party committed to a clean Brexit, a poll shows.
Almost 70 percent of Brits think Brexit is going badly, a poll has revealed, with the majority of both Leave and Remain voters blaming the government.
The top two issues facing the European Union (EU), according to voters in Britain, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Sweden, Finland, Poland, and Lithuania, are immigration and terrorism.
Most Brits think immigration has been too high over the last ten years, and a massive majority back the government’s “hostile environment” to illegal migrants, despite the so-called Windrush scandal.
Just 12 per cent of British voters want the government to “abandon Brexit completely” and keep the UK locked inside the European Union (EU), a new poll has revealed.
Tory members favour socially conservative and committed Brexiteer Jacob Rees-Mogg MP as a replacement for Theresa May, as her position as leader looks increasingly weak.
English patriotism is on the rise, with increasing numbers of people identifying as solely English rather than British, a survey has found.
Opinion on the European Union (EU) referendum question may cut across the political divide, but when it comes to the UK’s national boundaries the divide is crystal clear: Scotland backs remaining within the EU while much of England wants out. In May
A new YouGov/CBS poll shows Republican presidential frontrunner Donald Trump leading Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) by 18 points, 49-31, ahead of the upcoming California primary. Ohio governor John Kasich clocked in at 16 percent.