A poll by Focaldata suggests that British attitudes towards the EU appear to be vacillating. Guardian. A majority of 53 per cent want Britain to have a closer relationship with the EU.
That view has also increased in constituencies where a majority voted to leave the EU in 2016. 74.6 per cent of the Boston and Gegness, Lincolnshire constituency voted to leave the EU in 2016. However, in the new survey, it is more than double. (40 per cent) prefer to develop closer ties with the EU than wish to distance themselves from the Union (19 per cent).
Only 14 per cent signed the opposing view that Britain should remain further away from the EU. 23 percent responded that they should not change their current relationship.
Look for increased labor immigration
In a survey of 10,000 people on behalf of international campaigning organization Best for Britain, 61 per cent said Brexit has created more problems than it has solved. Only 21 percent think Brexit has solved more problems than it created.
After official figures released last week showed that migration to the UK reached a new peak in 2022, Brexiteers argued that Britain would be better able to control its borders if it left the EU. More than half of survey respondents believed the UK should issue more visas to foreign workers to work in the country.
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