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View Full Version : EU REFERENDUM: RECORD LEAD FOR STAYING IN EUROPE



Chippiewill
17-06-2014, 04:56 PM
Support for staying in the European Union is at the highest level ever recorded under the current government

Angela Merkel reportedly wants Jean-Claude Juncker appointed as European Commissioner “as soon as possible”, in the latest blow to the Government’s bid to keep the Luxembourgish politician out of the top EU job. David Cameron has expended considerable political capital pushing for an alternative to Mr Juncker, a traditional European federalist whose appointment the Government believes would seriously jeopardise their ambitions for renegotiating Britain’s relationship with the European Union.

At the same time however, the British public are increasingly positive about staying in the Union – according to research into how people would vote in an in/out EU membership referendum. YouGov’s latest poll for The Sun finds an eight point lead for those who want Britain to remain in the European Union, the largest lead recorded since YouGov first asked the question in September 2010. 44% would now vote to stay in the Union, while 36% would vote to leave.


http://i.imgur.com/dpZvYnR.png

YouGov also asked people how they would vote in the event David Cameron successfully renegotiates Britain’s relationship with the European Union. In this situation, ‘remain in’ surges to a 35-point lead – the largest since the question was first asked this way in June 2012.

The prime minister has promised that if the Conservatives are re-elected to government next May, Britain will have an in/out referendum on EU membership in 2017, but blowback over Mr Juncker’s appointment could mean the vote comes even sooner.
http://yougov.co.uk/news/2014/06/17/eu-referendum-record-lead/

Interesting news given UKIP's recent support. Further indication that UKIP is just a protest vote.

dbgtz
17-06-2014, 10:52 PM
Not really. Since the voice of leaving the EU has changed, people have becoming more vocal in remaining as a consequence. I don't think UKIP is a protest vote, just the support of outright leaving the EU has been fairly skewed until recently.

-:Undertaker:-
17-06-2014, 11:03 PM
I've thought for a long while now that our best chance of getting out of this nightmare will be in the event of the Eurozone forming a political union over the next decade. Britain's destiny isn't in a federated continent, and at some point this destiny will collide with what the EU is all about.

Still, if people fall for renegotiation trick yet again then frankly they deserve everything that will follow from Brussels following a 'In' vote.

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