[QUOTE=Andy_Faber;40263413]You probably could, but as in so many instances you choose not to for some reason.
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rA it is already becoming clear that the arch Brexiteers are now claiming it isn't Brexit, its the fact it wasn't delivered properly - this is despite a) Most of the promises made at the time being undeliverable and b) It now being obvious just what the negative impact of Brexit is, which was highlighted at the time but dismissed as project fear.
Of course for some sovereignty is worth it - though why in that case we have just entered a trade deal which means the UK being a rule taker (one of the criticisms of the EU) but more than that allows companies and international corporations to sue the Government if they adopt policies or legislation that negatively impacts them.
In any case the move towards reintegration with the Eu at least economically is already starting, as reality overcomes the ideological ****wittery of certain politicians and Brexit supporters.
[QUOTE=ramAnag;40263433]I ‘joined’ no-one, just aimed to clarify the source of stats you’d referred to (partly by me referring to a post you hadn’t read, hadn’t understood or had chosen to ignore). I think GPs response on this earlier today is better than I have time to write at present
My anecdotes were in response to a post from Ramshank not yourself and given that you’ve been gaslit into not believing any of my anecdotes they obviously weren’t intended for your consumption
The cancel culture thing was just a bit of joshing
[QUOTE=Andy_Faber;40263579]Ah yes...of course...good old Andy and his jolly old ‘joshing’. The ever ready AF escape route.
‘Gaslit’? Who the hell has ‘gaslit’ me? You really do talk some bollux AF...and it’s not a matter of believing or disbelieving your anecdotes...it’s a question of which has more credibility, Statista’s sample of 2000 voters (apparently not enough according to Tricky) or your friends, family and various associates? Let’s just say I’d go with the former.
Or neither?
Of course.
But if I tried to use the voting of my friends and acquaintances as indicative of national levels of support for Brexit (Leave = 4, Remain = 24) you’d (rightly) dismiss the idea.
Similarly if I said that since the Referendum one of the ‘leavers’ had died and another had recognised the error of their ways, while all the
‘remainers’ were unchanged, so therefore support for Leave must be in decline you’d (again rightly) ridicule the suggestion.
The only conclusion you might be able to reach from the above is with regard to the company I keep.
So why not pay some attention to the Statista figures, especially seeing as Tricky’s initial objections seem to have been exposed by MA as ‘questionable’? Like all polls it’s imperfect and probably flawed, but it seems to provide a better and more up to date analysis of current opinion than anything else on offer.
Oops, pressed post too early.
So why do I distrust the polls? (1)
the polls were wrong in 2016 despite Swales rather dubious theory that the polls predicting a remain win were right, and the referendum result was not.
(2) applying the 80/20 rule, there would be at best 400 potential swing voters in the sample. Not enough to give much certainty.
A sample of 2000 might be enough to form a conclusion on a straight "do you like a new chocolate bar" type question, but when you ask "do you still like it after you've eaten it every day for 4 years" it isn't.
Anecdotally I concede that there is a backlash against Brexit, but that's always the case after any decision put to the public. Bye elections after general elections almost always see the party in power lose or see their majority slashed.
So overall I don't doubt that "if they would have known then what they know now" the 2016 result would have been different. However I don't feel the poll in question adds anything to my personal observations - which itself has no statistical validity either.
Finally, I promise, who actually commissioned the survey and what skin did they have in the game as regards outcome? Pollsters I'm sure figure out what outcome those who are paying for the poll want. And pollsters realize they will get paid better if the outcome is what's wanted.