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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
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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

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