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May and her Brexit-backing band have, up until now, always been able to count on the majority being in their corner.
The YouGov/Times survey found 43 per cent of voters believe Britain was right to vote to leave the EU. However, 45 per cent of the 1,590 surveyed said they thought it was the wrong decision.
More people think Brexit is wrong than right for the first time since the referendum, according to a Times poll which shows the Tory lead ahead of the election has shrunk in the past week.
Research suggests voters' views on EU membership have changed since the June referendum, with Remain now having majority support by the narrowest of margins
A majority of the country now think Britain should remain inside the European Union, according to a new poll released days before the critical Brexit vote in parliament.
Labour would fall behind the Liberal Democrats in the polls if Jeremy Corbyn helps the Tories to secure Brexit, according to a huge new poll.
Research commissioned by campaigners Hope Not Hate also showed 11% lead for Remain.
The YouGov survey of 25,000 citizens showed 53 per cent favour a second referendum while 47 per cent do not, once those answering “don’t know” have been discounted.
A fresh vote received more support than any of the four other options put to the public, including allowing the PM to go back to Brussels or a no-deal Brexit.
56 per cent of public now back Remain, while Leave vote has slumped to 44 per cent.
January marked the 18th straight month that a majority of British people, when asked by YouGov, responded that the 2016 vote to leave the European Union was "wrong."
Half think leaving EU will make it harder to find graduate role; 78 per cent fear career prospects will be harmed, poll finds.
Two-thirds of Labour supporters in Leave areas want fresh public poll amid widespread support for remaining in EU, poll finds.
Analysis of a YouGov survey for the People’s Vote campaign shared with HuffPost UK revealed 79% of 18-24 year olds in the north east, north west and east and west midlands want another public say on Brexit.
Young people are strongly in favour of a People’s Vote – with only 9% against it, survey finds.
Remain would secure 55 per cent majority if EU referendum were re-run, analysis of British Social Attitudes Survey respondents suggests.
52 per cent of people say the public should have a second referendum
"That is not true." @KrishGM challenges Conservative MP John Redwood's claim that "most of the public" want a no-deal Brexit.
Buried in the detail of a new poll which right-wing newspapers seized on as support for a no-deal Brexit reveals that the public have swung in support of Remain and believe that anti-Brexit measures are the best options for democracy.
Ex-cabinet minister Stephen Dorrell announces switch to Change UK, as Conservatives fall to a five-year polling low.
Britain would vote to stay in the European Union by a 12 percentage point margin if it was given another vote, the highest level since the shock 2016 Brexit referendum, according to a YouGov poll taken on Jan. 16.
Czech republic and Italy are most inclined to leave EU other than Britain – but still want to stay by large margin.
Private polls—and a timely ‘concession’ from the face of Leave—allowed the funds to make millions off the pound’s collapse.