Today’s poll asked a new set of questions designed to tap people’s perceptions of whether the UK is better or worse off as a result of being outside the EU. Hitherto, most polls that have addressed the issue have asked people what they think has been the impact of leaving the EU.
The latest poll from the UK in a Changing Europe/Redfield & Wilton Strategies
Brexit Tracker finds that, after leaving aside ‘Don’t Know’s, 55% would
vote to stay out of the EU and 45% to rejoin, figures that are only
modestly different from the tallies of 52% Leave, 48% Remain that were
recorded in the 2016 referendum.
But how do we account for the movement that has occurred in this
poll? In particular, to what extent does it reflect people’s views on
the consequences of now being outside the EU?
Today’s poll asked a new set of questions designed to tap people’s
perceptions of whether the UK is better or worse off as a result of
being outside the EU. Hitherto, most polls that have addressed the issue
have asked people what they think has been the impact of leaving the
EU. However, as Brexit gradually begins to fade from the rear-view
mirror of our memories, this approach will increasingly come to appear
dated. Some may not remember Brexit at all!
Over the longer term the question that will be pertinent is whether
or not Britain feels it is better off outside the EU than it would be as
part of the European club – and that is how respondents to today’s poll
were invited to consider the issue.
The table below summarises the results. The details of the wording of
each item varied – in the case of the economy, for example, the poll
asked whether the economy is ‘stronger’ or ‘weaker’ as a result of being
outside the EU, while in the case of the UK’s influence in the world,
it asked whether the country now had ‘more’ or ‘less influence’.
To simplify matters, we have put all the positive evaluations,
however worded, in a column headed ‘more/better’ and all the negative
ones in a column labelled ‘less/worse’. In the far right hand column we
show the proportion giving a positive response minus those expressing a
negative one.
Table: Perceptions of the Consequences of Being Outside the EU
|
More/Better |
Same/Similar |
Less/Worse |
More/Better minus Less/Worse |
|
% |
% |
% |
|
Vaccination programme |
49 |
27 |
13 |
+36 |
Control own affairs |
39 |
41 |
28 |
+11 |
Pandemic response |
31 |
30 |
28 |
+3 |
EU immigration |
28 |
28 |
25 |
+3 |
Non-EU immigration |
19 |
32 |
28 |
-9 |
Wages |
11 |
41 |
31 |
-20 |
Influence in world |
17 |
27 |
44 |
-27 |
Economy |
19 |
20 |
48 |
-29 |
NHS |
11 |
37 |
43 |
-32 |
Sell goods abroad |
11 |
17 |
46 |
-35 |
Cost of living |
9 |
17 |
66 |
-57 |
Note: In the case of the items on immigration and cost of living,
the response, ‘higher’ has been interpreted as ‘worse’, and ‘lower’ as
‘better’
There is a considerable variation in the balance of evaluations.
While nearly half say that the UK’s Covid-19 vaccination programme has
been better as a result of being outside the EU – a claim that has often been made by the UK government
– two-thirds (66%) believe that the cost of living has been increasing
as a result of not being a member, while under one in ten (9%) say that
it has been lower. That said, those expressing a negative view outnumber
those giving a positive response on seven of the eleven items in the
table, suggesting that, on balance, the consequences of Brexit are
viewed relatively unfavourably.
These figures make it surprising that the poll also suggests that
somewhat more people would now vote to stay out of the EU than backed
Leave in 2016.
To unravel this web further, we can undertake some statistical
modelling which identifies which of the perceptions reported in the
table are most closely associated with people expressing a different
view now about EU membership from the one they supported in June 2016.
This modelling reveals that two evaluations are particularly and
independently associated with people expressing a different view – the
perceived impact of being outside the EU on the UK’s influence in the
world and on the country’s economy....
more at UKandEU
© The UK in a changing Europe
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