Signs of disappointment in the UK over the post-Brexit are mounting and the fallout is being felt in a poll by the international project World Values Survey, which says that since the referendum on the Brussels divorce, there has been confidence among Britons in the EU has woken up again.
39% of His Majesty’s subjects have confidence in the Union as an institution – up seven percentage points from 2016 – according to the Guardian’s analysis of the results, while support for Westminster’s Parliament has fallen by 10 points to 22% and the towards the government has also fallen. This is one of the multiple signals that have emerged in recent months, particularly given the negative impact of the exit from the EU, starting with the impact on the UK economy, also underlined by the Bank of England, with the impact on productivity and trade abroad and by the too many promises the Tories have not yet made to government.
However, this disappointment could also be temporary and be exacerbated by the difficult economic situation at the international level. Still looking at the polls, in fact, there are signs of a partial recovery of consensus over the Conservative Party over the opposition Labor Party, led by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, who has taken a more pragmatic line on Brussels and recently struck the compromise deal with the EU on Relaxation of the post-Brexit protocol for Northern Ireland, but above all the promise against “illegal immigration” with the slogan “stop the you disembark”, which has been contested by many.
With the Sunak executive, the Tories have gained eight percentage points if you look at the average of the polls in the kingdom compared to Labour, which is still around twenty points ahead of the ruling party anyway.
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