THREE years after Brexit was concluded - and approaching seven years since the referendum - Bregret is in the air and not just among those who put their cross in the Leave box in 2016. A heady mix of inflation, cost-of-living crisis and tax rises, with no sunny uplands of an economic growth or business upswing, has led to an outbreak of buyers' remorse. Matt Goodwin, a pollster whose research has focused on the changing views of Brexit and Red Wall voters, noted that "the trend of Bregret is accelerating and looks set to cause a growing problem for the Conservative Party". It has also shaped opportunity and some pitfalls for Labour, which may well end up inheriting the task of reconnecting the UK to a suspicious and touchy institutional Europe, itself facing divisions on energy policy and the response to the Ukraine crisis.
Do we Bregret rien, a bit or a lot? As things stand, the numbers of outright Bregretters is 54 per cent. What has changed is the number of convinced Leavers - down 12 per cent and the commensurate rise in "don't knows".
This story is from the February 15, 2023 edition of Evening Standard.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the February 15, 2023 edition of Evening Standard.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
UK biotech says stock market is no longer the right home’
AN OXFORD-based biotech company today became the latest firm to quit the London Stock Exchange after complaining that the undervaluation of its shares \"compromises\" its ability to deliver treatments for \"people living with debilitating conditions\".
WEST HAM'S BIG SUMMER REVAMP FOR LOPETEGUI
CLUB TO BACK SPANIARD WITH UP TO SIX SIGNINGS AS PART OF NEW EUROPEAN-STYLE TRANSFER APPROACH
Wharton ready to sparkle as England's missing gem
Midfielder looks like perfect fit alongside Rice and Bellingham
Composed Lopetegul always has his eyes on the future
High-profile dumpings hurt but boss will want to prove a point
Wetherspoon’s Martin hails lively pub sales
THE Great British Pub is back, says no less an authority than the founder and chairman of JD Wetherspoon.
Boohoo losses hit £160m as China rivals go cheaper
STRUGGLING fast fashion firm Boohoo left the City in doubt about its recovery plan this morning as losses ballooned to £160 million and sales slid by double digits across all of its regions.
Can Julie's find its groove again?
Mick Jagger was a regular and Tina Turner danced on the tables... Will the new owners get the magic back, asks Josh Barrie
When even the brutal humiliations become routine, you know it's time up for Ten Hag
ASTRIKING aspect of Manchester United’s 4-0 defeat to Crystal Palace on Monday was just how little the scoreline registered — at least for me, anyway.
Battersea Park shows what London does best and it's why I love living in this city
THIS I’m not being funny but… how incredible are London’s parks? I am particularly proud of Battersea Park. As someone that was born just over the bridge in Pimlico, then grew up in Battersea, I’ve been hanging out in the area all my life, and it’s been a big part of it.
Lurid testimony is exposing Trump in more ways than one
STORMY Daniels had her day in court in New York yesterday and how you feel about her performance depends, like so much else, on how you feel about Donald Trump.