czwartek, 23 czerwca 2016

Fwd: The UK's EU referendum: June 23rd 2016

More from The Economist





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Brexit  Build-up to a referendum



  • The UK's EU referendum: June 23rd 2016

    Voting intention %

    Con
    Lib Dem
    North
    Scotland
    Female
    Rich
    Young
    Labour
    UKIP
    South
    Wales
    Male
    Poor
    Old
    MayMayMayMayMayMayMayMayMayMayMayMayMayMayMayMayMayMayJunJunJunJunJunJunJunJunJunJunJunJunJunJunJunJunJunJunJunJunJunJun14151617181920212223242526272829303101020304050607080910111213141516171819202122020406080100
    % breakdown by category
    Overall:
    Male:
    Female:
    Young:
    Old:
    Poor:
    Rich:
    44Remain
    43Leave
    11Don't know
    BMG; ComRes; ICM; Ipsos MORI; Survation; TNS; YouGov (polls of >900 adults only)
  • Why would you vote for this?

    The IMF lays out the grave consequences of Brexit

    Sober analysis from economists in Washington, DC
  • Bagehot

    The Nigel Farage Show

    Parochial and vacuous, Britain's dismal referendum campaign has been a populist's dream
  • Advertisement
  • In their words (II)

    Heard on the trail

  • The referendum campaign

    The Battle of Evermore

    It has been a bad-tempered and unenlightening campaign, during which few have changed their minds. But Vote Leave now has an edge
  • In their words (I)

    Heard from overseas

  • Brexit

    What if

    The aftermath of a vote to leave the European Union will depend on unpredictable responses in all sorts of places. It is unlikely to be pretty
  • Brexit briefs

    The Economist's guide to Britain's EU referendum

    The facts about everything from sovereignty and immigration to economics and the consequences of leaving
  • Brexit polling

    Leave is gaining ground. But do not rule out Remain just yet

  • Schumpeter

    Their eyes on Albion

    Most European bosses are twitchy about Brexit; a few spy an opportunity
  • Brexit

    Jeremy Corbyn, saboteur

    Lacklustre and poorly led, the Labour Party is letting down the Remain campaign
  • Brexit brief

    The charms of variable geometry

    Our final Brexit brief argues that a multispeed Europe suits Britain—and others
  • Consequences of Brexit

    Beyond the fringe

    Brexiteers are deliberately vague about the alternatives to European Union membership. That is because most models, such as Iceland's, are unsatisfactory
  • Bagehot

    The new J-curve

    Britain's flirtation with Brexit is more complicated than an anti-globalisation vote
  • Register or regret

    Young voters! Your country needs you

  • Bagehot

    Pity the Brexpats

    Britain's diaspora could pay a high price for a vote to leave the European Union on June 23rd
  • Brexit brief

    If it were done

    There is some dispute over the mechanics of how to leave the EU
  • Brexit and the union

    Tug of war

    Brexit could lead to a second Scottish independence referendum. But the place to fret about most is Northern Ireland
  • The Muslims are coming!

    The Leave campaign's dog-whistle strategy will only succeed if Remain voters fail to turn out

  • Brexit brief

    Yes, we have no straight bananas

    Brexiteers carp at European Union red tape, but how much of it would they tear up?
  • Brexit and science

    The European experiment

    Most scientists want to stay in the EU
  • Bagehot

    The continental imperative

    To wash its hands of Europe would be a betrayal of Britain's past, and future
  • Beyond June 23rd

    The Remain campaign must outlive the referendum

  • The Brexit debate

    The Treasury warns of a "do-it-yourself" recession after a Brexit vote

    The Treasury says Brexit would be an economic disaster, but Brexiteers do not agree
  • Brexit and the Bank of England

    He can, Carney

    The governor is right to intervene in the debate over Europe
  • Brexit brief

    We plough the fields and scarper

    Although agriculture could lose out, most farmers seem to back Brexit
  • Britain and Europe

    Historians and Brexit

    For and against Britain leaving Europe
  • Brexit brief

    Security concerns

    Is Britain safer in the European Union than outside it?
  • Brexit brief

    City blues

    The financial-services industry would be one of the biggest losers from Brexit
  • EU referendum campaign

    The eternal quest for youth

    So far opinions have barely shifted. That means the outcome will depend on turnout by young voters
  • Free exchange

    If it ain't broke, don't Brexit

  • Brexit brief

    How others see it

    The European Union would suffer from Brexit—which is why it could not be kind to Britain afterwards
  • Poll of voters' concerns

    Britons are as worried about the NHS as about immigration

    Anti-EU campaigners are doing their best to link disparate issues
  • Obama in London

    Barack Obama is right: Britain could lead Europe if it wanted to

  • Brexit and the young

    Turning out the teens

    Universities want students to vote in the EU referendum
  • America and Brexit

    More special in Europe

    As Britain's EU referendum nears, Barack Obama joins the Remain campaign
  • Brexit brief

    The ins and the outs

    Britain has the best of both worlds
  • Bagehot

    B for Brexit

    For diehard Eurosceptics, the Leave campaign is a national liberation movement
  • Daily chart

    Is uncertainty about "Brexit" harming the British economy?

  • Brexit

    A Treasury analysis suggests the costs of Brexit would be high

    Leaving the EU would mean a substantial loss for Britain's economy, says report
  • Labour rejects "Lexit"

    The telling sincerity of Jeremy Corbyn's EU conversion

  • Vote Leave wins the right to lead the pro-Brexit campaign

    The choice of official campaigning group may boost Brexit's chances

  • A matter of business

    Most firms want to stay in the European Union, but some are leery of saying so

  • Dreaming of sovereignty

    Talk of taking back power may be delusional, but more democracy is not

  • The economic consequences

    Most estimates of lost income are small, but the risk of bigger losses is large

  • Referendum, what referendum?

    Calm and competent, the Remain campaign is haunted by the spectre of indifference

  • Let them not come

    Hostility to large-scale European Union migration could decide the referendum

  • Unfavourable trade winds

    It would be hard for Britain to negotiate good trade deals post-Brexit

  • Next stop: Brexit?

    The campaign to leave the European Union is still behind, but picking up speed

  • The roots of Euroscepticism

    Why Britons are warier than other Europeans of the EU

  • Channel hopping

    A twelvefold rise in attempted illegal entries inflames Eurotensions

  • Unity in disunity

    Conservative splits on Europe belie the reality: Eurosceptics have already taken over the party

  • The view from abroad

    London risks losing its status as the capital of the world, argues James Rubin, a former US assistant secretary of state

  • The Brexit delusion

    David Cameron will struggle to win his referendum. If he loses, the result will be messy at best and at worst disastrous

  • Blue on blue

    It's off to the Khyber Pass for Tories who play dirty over the next four months

  • The real danger of Brexit

    Leaving the EU would hurt Britain—and would also deal a terrible blow to the West

  • The meaning of Brexit

    An interview with Ian Bremmer

  • A Brexit backgrounder

    The key questions, charted

  • A tale of two cities

    Britain's great European divide is really about education and class

  • Boris Johnson is wrong

    In the 21st century, sovereignty is always relative


  • http://www.economist.com/Brexit

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