terça-feira, 5 de abril de 2016

Support for British stay in the EU grows, says research

Primeiro-ministro britânico, David Cameron. 26/11/2015 REUTERS/Suzanne Plunkett
British Prime Minister David Cameron: the country will decide whether to continue joined the EU in a referendum on June 23

London - Support for the permanence of Britain in the European Union increased in the last month, leading to the belief that a crisis in the steel industry and attacks on Brussels did not strengthen the favorable field to the block output, according to research ORB Institute for the Daily Telegraph.

A poll released on Tuesday showed that 51% of Britons want to keep the bloc of 28 countries, while 44% prefer a break, with 5% undecided. The country will decide whether to continue joined the EU in a referendum on 23 June.

Support for the campaign "is" increased four percentage points compared with a similar survey conducted last month, the Daily Telegraph said indicate that the warnings of British Prime Minister David Cameron, and others who want to Great Britain Britain stay in the EU, that an exit would impact on the country's economy took effect.

"Those who campaign to let Europe are calling on the British people to make an extraordinary choice - be the first major economy in history to deliberately choose a business relationship of the second category, and more restrictive, for its largest market," wrote Cameron in an article for the newspaper.


It was expected that the militant attacks in Brussels in March, in which 32 people died, and Tata Steel company's decision to put on sale its loss-making factory in Wales would increase support for block output, which is not over going on, according to the survey.

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