- A newly released survey found just 35% of British people supporting Brexit, with 57% wanting to rejoin the
European Union . - The nearly 60% of people who told the European Social Survey that they wanted Britain to be in the EU was far greater than the 48% who backed Remain in 2016.
- Support for EU membership has risen across Europe, the survey said.
There has been a surge in support for European Union membership among the British public since the Brexit referendum, a major new survey found.
The European Social Survey, conducted every two years, found that support for the EU had risen across the continent and in Britain.
The survey, completed in 2019 and released this week, found that 57% of Brits said they would vote to be inside the EU, compared with 50% who said the same in the previous survey, released in 2018.
By contrast, just 35% said they would vote to be outside the EU, compared with the 52% of people who voted to leave in 2016. Eight percent of Brits said they would not vote in such a referendum.
The findings have been released four years after Britain voted to leave, as the country faces an increasingly gloomy economic outlook amid the coronavirus pandemic.
The UK is in the Brexit transition period, which means it maintains the same trade and customs rules it had before leaving the EU.
Prime Minister
Rejoining the EU remains a distant prospect for the UK, with neither Johnson's government nor the opposition Labour Party calling for the country to rejoin.
Support for EU membership has risen across Europe
The survey also found support for EU membership had increased across the continent, despite some predictions that Brexit would trigger a wave of opposition to the union in other European countries. All the countries surveyed saw support for EU membership rise.
There was a 12% rise in support for EU membership in Finland and an 11% support for membership in the Czech Republic. In Britain support for membership has risen by 7% since the previous survey in 2017.