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Brixham-based fish merchant Ian Perkes told Financial Times that he “never looked at implications of the paperwork” that a vote to leave would bring.
“If there wasn’t any Brexit, there wouldn’t be any issues,” he said. “We were getting on fine before that.”
“Brexit has caused us enormous problems with recruitment,” the TV presenter bemoaned after facing a lack of EU staff for her own hotel.
Sarah from Christchurch voted Leave to express her anger at ‘the establishment’. She has since changed her mind after seeing the government’s shambolic negotiations. She is a RemainerNow and would like to have another say to vote to Remain.
Polls show average annual gap between those who believe it was ‘wrong’ to vote to Leave compared to ‘right’ has risen to double digits for the first time. / A growing number of Britons say the UK was wrong to Brexit, according to a Standard analysis of more than 200 polls.
Mr Perkes, has admitted he “got it wrong” when he voted to leave the EU
A British fisherman has expressed his regret over voting for Brexit during an appearance on Danish TV.
If we are to leave the European Union we want a sensible Brexit. There’s no chance of that just now. / "Brexit has paralysed the system. It has turned Britain into a laughing stock. And it is certain to make us poorer and to lead to lower incomes and lost jobs."
Nadeem Ahmed also warned leaving EU had triggered racist attacks and backed second referendum, in embarrassment for Boris Johnson.
KentLive conducted a straw poll in Dover of 50 people asking how they would vote if they could repeat 2016.
If there was a vote to leave the EU tomorrow, only 36 per cent would vote out - compared to 52 per cent in 2016.
Strong support for closer EU relationship as Labour pledges to leave deal in place.
We're Remainer Now - a group giving voice to those who voted Leave in the 2016 EU Referendum who have changed their minds and are now supporting a People's Vote on Brexit.
David Davis once said ‘if a democracy cannot change its mind, it ceases to be a democracy’. Well Mr Davis, I wish to change my mind.
An Opinium poll also found that 42% of people who voted Leave in 2016 had a negative view of how it had turned out.
YouGov poll finds 32 per cent of Britons think it has turned out ‘very badly’.
Almost three years after the United Kingdom's formal departure from the European Union, voters are turning sour on the 2016 decision to leave. A recent poll showed that 57% of voters view the departure from the EU as a mistake compared to the 52% who voted for the original Brexit referendum. So what changed?
By contrast, 32 per cent thought Brexit has been going “very badly”, and 21 per cent said it turned out “fairly badly”.
Up to this point, Brexit is turning out to be an unmitigated disaster for production agriculture in the UK.
A majority of the public is unhappy about the post-Brexit trade agreement that Boris Johnson secured with the EU, a new survey has found.
Those who have changed their mind are notably younger than those who still think it was right to vote to leave the EU.