>>96142so more or less what the "polling" was telling them right before the brexit vote?
>>96163Yep, but they will probably use this to push for a new referendum, or as the EU says
>European leaders warned that negotiations, which have been arduous so far, could now become tougher >>96168if a political solution is failing sounds like the time for voting is over and the britbongs finally need to take action
The numbers would be skewed due to Scotland who is overwhelmingly pro-EU, but even then this a sample size of 1,400. See here what's reflected from the margin of error:
>Whilst the Remain lead may be eye-catching, as is the case with all polls that show one side narrowly “out-in-front”, at this stage readers should treat the results with caution. The narrow Remain lead is within the poll’s margin of error, +/- 2.5 percentage points, where we can be confident that that the actual results falls. This means that, as for most polling results published at this time, both sides are effectively “neck and neck”. Indeed, statistically speaking it is entirely possible, from these results, that Leave is slightly ahead.You can look at the entire article and find that the monthly graph this based on has hardly changed.
http://www.bmgresearch.co.uk/independentbmg-poll-public-remain-split-latest-eu-referendum-poll/>>96142Pretty happy to see Britain has more or less held strong over the process, 3% is a very small change, considering how mismanaged the Tories have been with Brexit.
As a side note, what do you guys hope to see come of Brexit in the future? I'm hoping for much closer ties to the Commonwealth (ignore flair, am Australian) and maybe some kind of pseudo-empire?
>>96189I suspect stronger ties to America. Hopefully a stronger Russian relationship, then a gradual process into a more redpilled nation as the continental drift sets in. But, I only see this after Brexit, which so far has been diplomatic fuckery. I'd like there to be a strong Commonwealth like there was before, but that would require some centralisation and pure grade real politicks.
>>96215with may in charge? working with putin and trump? not happening, brexit was doomed when she became PM
>>96225I said after Brexit. It was doubtful that old hag could even make it through the general election. She's not staying past Brexit.
>>96177So let's look at what these numbers really reflect.
In Scotland, the most Pro-EU part of all of the UK, they are only 51% remain. This is also definitely in an incredibly biased sample size considering those hosting it, and the kind of person that sits around answering polls for niggers all day.
You know maybe its possible that the UK actually wants to leave the EU.