Poll results: UK UK flag

Do you think that cutting the amount of money available for spending on public services by about £615m per week (the equivalent of about 22% of what we currently spend on the NHS) would be a price worth paying in a potential deal scenario in which the UK would face some new barriers to trading with the EU, could seek to make new trade deals with the rest of the world and would opt out of as many EU regulations as possible, and would introduce some new limits on EU immigration?

Results from 1 poll, conducted from 6 April 2018 to 8 April 2018

Data from Great Britain The Brexit process

Do you think that cutting the amount of money available for spending on public services by about £1.25bn per week (the equivalent of about 44% of what we currently spend on the NHS) would be a price worth paying in a potential deal scenario in which the UK would face significant new tariffs and other barriers to trading with the EU, could seek to make new trade deals with the rest of the world and could opt out of some EU regulations, and could control EU immigration in the same way that it controls immigration from the rest of the world?

Results from 1 poll, conducted from 6 April 2018 to 8 April 2018

Data from Great Britain The Brexit process

Do you think that cutting the amount of money available for spending on public services by about £875m per week (the equivalent of about 31% of what we currently spend on the NHS) would be a price worth paying in a potential deal scenario in which the UK would face some new tariffs and other barriers to trading with the EU, could seek to make new trade deals with the rest of the world and could opt out of some EU regulations, and could introduce some new limits on EU immigration?

Results from 1 poll, conducted from 6 April 2018 to 8 April 2018

Data from Great Britain The Brexit process

Do you think that cutting the amount of money available for spending on public services by about £260m per week (the equivalent of about 9% of what we currently spend on the NHS) would be a price worth paying in a potential deal scenario in which the UK would face some new barriers to trading with the EU, could seek to make new trade deals with the rest of the world and would still be bound by most EU regulations, and where there would be no new limits to EU immigration?

Results from 1 poll, conducted from 6 April 2018 to 8 April 2018

Data from Great Britain The Brexit process

Would you prefer an immigration system that has fewer restrictions on migrants coming to live and work in the UK from EU countries and more restrictions on migrants coming to live and work in the UK from non-EU countries, or an immigration system that applies the same restrictions on everyone coming to live and work in the UK, regardless of whether they come from EU countries or non-EU countries?

Results from 1 poll, conducted from 13 March 2018 to 16 March 2018

Data from Great Britain Migration and freedom of movement

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