Britain’s changing expectations on the impact of Brexit

Dr Joel Rogers de WaalAcademic Director, YouGov
March 22, 2019, 1:05 PM GMT+0

Repeat polling is starting to portray a discernible loss of Leavers' faith in the original promise of Brexit

Since just before the 2016 EU Referendum, the YouGov-Cambridge Centre has periodically measured British expectations towards the impact of Brexit on various aspects of life, from jobs to immigration and security, as part of a joint project with the Cambridge University Forum on Geopolitics.

This includes near-identical surveys fielded to national samples of the British public in April 2016, May 2017 and February 2019. The latest results were produced to coincide with a one-day conference held by the Forum on the fateful (sort of) date of 29th March, examining the future stability of the European Union.

As findings show, the overall percentage of those who think Brexit would be ultimately bad for British jobs has shifted from 33% in 2016 to 44% in 2019. Perhaps unsurprisingly, this includes a marked increase in the number of Remain voters supporting such a view – from 69% in 2017 to 79% in 2019. But we also find a sizeable drop in the percentage of Leave voters who believe the opposite, namely that leaving would instead be good for jobs, from 57% in 2017 to 42% in 2019.

Impact of leaving the EU on British jobs %

TotalRemainLeave

2016

2017

2019

2017

2019

2017

2019

Good for jobs

20

29

21

5

3

57

Bad for jobs

33

34

44

69

79

4

No difference

29

20

22

14

8

25

Don't know

19

17

14

12

10

14

12

By a similar token, the overall percentage of Britons who think leaving would make the country economically worse off has climbed from 35% in 2016 to 40% in 2017 to 45% in 2019. The same results include a 9% drop among Leave voters supporting the opposite view that it would make Britain better off, from 57% in 2017 to 48% in 2019.

Impact of leaving on the British economy %

TotalRemainLeave

2016

2017

2019

2017

2019

2017

2019

Better off

22

28

23

4

4

57

Worse off

35

40

45

78

81

7

No difference

24

16

18

8

6

22

Don't know

19

17

14

10

9

14

11

On other issues, the percentage of those overall who think leaving would lead to less immigration has progressively decreased over the three surveys, from 57% in 2016 to 47% in 2017 and 43% in 2019. Among Leave voters, this includes a drop from 72% in 2017 to 63% in 2019.

Impact of leaving on immigration into Britain %

TotalRemainLeave

2016

2017

2019

2017

2019

2017

2019

Lead to more

4

2

8

4

10

1

Lead to less

57

47

43

27

27

72

No difference

26

37

36

58

50

18

Don't know

13

14

13

12

13

9

7

We have also grown more cautious about the security aspect, it seems. The percentage of respondents overall saying Britain would be more at risk from terrorism after leaving the EU has risen from 14% in 2016 to 23% in 2019, while the portion of those thinking we will be at less such risk has dropped from 24% to 13% in the same period. Among Remain voters, this includes a striking increase in the amount of Remain voters saying the terrorism risk would increase – from 22% in 2017 to 41% in 2019 – and a fall from 64% to 41% among the same group who think Brexit would make no difference to the issue. Leave voters portray a smaller but still notable drop in the number who think the terrorism risk would be less after Brexit, from 27% in 2017 to 20% in 2019

Impact of leaving on the terror risk to Britain %

TotalRemainLeave

2016

2017

2019

2017

2019

2017

2019

More risk

14

12

23

22

41

3

Less risk

24

15

13

3

5

27

No difference

47

60

50

64

41

61

Don't know

16

13

15

11

14

9

9

Beyond thinking merely about the consequences at home, views about the impact of Brexit on mainland Europe have also become more negative, it seems, with a progressive rise in the portion of those saying it will make the EU economically worse off – from 39% in 2016 to 43% in 2017 to 52% in 2019. This includes an increase among Remain voters who share this view from 40% in 2017 to 47% in 2019, and a notably larger increase among Leave voters saying the same, from 52% in 2017 to 67% in 2019.

Impact of leaving on the EU economy %

TotalRemainLeave

2016

2017

2019

2017

2019

2017

2019

Better off

2

2

3

2

2

3

Worse off

39

43

52

40

47

52

No difference

33

31

25

40

31

25

Don't know

25

23

19

18

19

20

13

Whether any of these figures amount to a softening of the Leave vote is, of course, a very different question. As other YouGov polling shows, the vast majority of both Remain and Leave voters have continued to back their referendum choice since 2016, while broadly comparable attrition in both groups has done little to disrupt the balance between them.

What seems fair to suggest from these results, however, is that Leave voters are starting to portray a notable loss of faith in the original promise of Brexit on several fronts.

See results:

YGC Tracker Brexit Impact 2016

YGC Tracker Brexit Impact 2017

YGC Tracker Brexit Impact 2019

Methodology: fieldwork was conducted online between: 13–14 April, 2016; 1-2 May, 2017; and 26-27 Feb, 2019. Total sample sizes were: 1688 GB adults (2016); 1614 GB adults (2017); and 1730 GB adults (2019). For each survey, the data have been weighted and results are representative of all British adults aged 18+.

Image: Getty