XPost: uk.radio.amateur, uk.politics.misc, uk.d-i-y
From: jkb675@gmail.com
"Col" wrote in message
news:h0ghbfFfvpvU1@mid.individual.net...
> On 13/10/2019 12:18, nightjar wrote:
>> On 12/10/2019 15:40, Stephen Cole wrote:
>>> Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
>>>> In article ,
>>>> Cursitor Doom wrote:
>>>>> I still have a legitimate interest, mate. And if there's another
>>>>> Referendum I'll be voting in it again, same as before, just like
>>>>> everyone else who voted Leave - plus not a few former Remainers who've
>>>>> seen the light over the last 3 years.
>>>>
>>>> Oddly, most the polls seem to show the opposite has happened.
>>>>
>>>
>>> That€€€s no surprise as the electorate has changed; a million or more
dead
>>> Leave voters and a couple million freshly-minted teenage voters since
>>> June
>>> 2016. The longer that Brexit is fobbed off before a 2nd referendum the
>>> more
>>> the scales will tip toward Remain.
>>>
>>
>> It is more complicated than that.
>>
>> As the population ages, it tends to get more right wing, so the ones that
>> die off are replaced by others and the balance due to age remains much
>> the same over time. OTOH, there is a generational effect, with each
>> generation currently tending to be slightly more left wing than the one
>> before. That means that, although the older a generation gets the more
>> right wing, on average, it becomes, it doesn't become quite as right wing
>> as the one before it.
>>
>> However, to add to all that, people with higher levels of education (A
>> level or above) appear to be more likely to support remain and the
>> overall level of education of the population is rising a few percent each
>> year.
>>
>> The net effect is that there will be a trend towards greater support for
>> remain, but I'm not sure that 3-4 years is long enough for that to make a
>> significant difference.
>>
>> Of greater influence are probably dissatisfaction with the mess that the
>> Brexiteers have made of the process so far and a growing realisation of
>> just how much of the Leave campaign was pure fantasy.
>>
>
> I have always thought that there was a degree of complacency amongst
> remainers during the referendum. The polls always seemed to show a
> reasonably comfortable lead for remain and I think relatively few people
> genuinely thought that leave would win, so some remainers probably stayed
> at home.
>
> If there is a second referendum then there would certainly be no
> complacency!
But likely a lot more heartily sick of the entire fiasco
who wont bother to vote now that they have seen
parliament ignore the result of the first referendum.
And there wont be a second referendum anyway,
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)
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