The Citizen (Gauteng)

New vote would be to stay in EU

SURVEY: 54% WOULD VOTE ‘REMAIN’ IN NEW BALLOT

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Prime Minister Theresa May has ruled out another referendum.

London

Britons would vote to stay in the European Union if there were another ballot as those in the biggest “leave”-voting areas change their minds, a survey for Channel 4 published this week showed.

Britain would back “remain” by 54% to 46%, the study by Survation for the broadcaste­r showed. It estimated that more than a hundred local authoritie­s would now vote to stay.

“Leave” won the June 2016 vote by 51.9% to 48.1%. Prime Minister Theresa May has repeatedly ruled out another referendum on the issue.

Brexiteers argue May’s predecesso­r, David Cameron, said during the campaign that the decision would be final and there would be no reruns. They say May should get on with delivering Brexit.

But those who back a “people’s vote” on any final deal say May’s vision for Brexit was not on the ballot paper in 2016, so the public should be allowed another say when the terms of Brexit are known.

Survation interviewe­d 20 000 people online between October 20 and November 2. Up to now, polls have shown no major change in public opinion. Most polls predicted “remain” would win before the 2016 referendum.

Britain is due to leave the bloc on March 29, with London and Brussels yet to secure an agreement on the terms of the UK’s departure and avoid a disruptive “no deal” scenario.

Even if May overcomes infighting in her own Conservati­ve Party to finalise an agreement, the Survation poll found that 33% of people would reject the deal compared to just 26% who would accept it.

Should May be unable to agree a deal by March 29, 36% said Britain should leave without a deal, 35% said it should stay in the EU and 19% said departure should be delayed until an agreement is reached.

However, if May did agree a deal, 43% would support a referendum to choose between accepting the deal or remaining in the EU, compared to 37% who would oppose the choice, the survey found. – Reuters

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