How the UK would vote if the referendum were re-run
Across all respondents, excluding don’t knows, remain leads leave by 51% to 49%. However, the same ratio of responses was seen in 2016; that is, the sample had a slight remain bias against the result of the referendum. Opinion polls before the referendum also underestimated the leave vote.
How Brexit views are shifting and becoming more polarised among some groups of voters
The change from 2016 is against respondents who say they voted then and remember, and are prepared to say, which way they voted. For this reason, the leave and remain percentages in this section do not add up to 100. For example, in the student case, much of the new support for remain seems to arise from those who did not (or could not) vote in 2016.
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