Karte der Brexit-Abstimmung (was dazu führte, dass das Vereinigte Königreich die EU mit 51,9 % der Gesamtstimmen verließ)

Von immanuellalala

22 Kommentare

  1. Real-Pomegranate-235 on

    So basically Brexit was voted for by people who live in rural areas (that aren’t Welsh speaking, NI catholic or Scottish) + brummies for some reason.

  2. If_you_have_Ghost on

    51.9% of those who voted represents about 37% of actually eligible voters. Couple that with the fact that the vote was so close, treating a non-binding referendum as such was an insane act of economic and cultural suicide. We don’t live in a plebiscite democracy, we are a representative democracy.

    One day we *will* rejoin the EU. But for those of us who have suffered the horrendous effects of Brexit, it will be much too late.

    Everything has got worse since Brexit. And nothing has improved for those who voted in favour either. Not a single person has been able to enumerate a single tangible benefit; only disadvantages.

    America doesn’t have a monopoly on collective stupidity!

  3. Salt-Evidence-6834 on

    There must be Russian dirt on Farage. They sooner it all comes out, the sooner enough of our useful idiots might realise they were played by him & some of the damage can start to be undone.

  4. Haggis_McHaggis_ on

    As a Scot, the bit I hate most is they used EU membership AGAINST us during IndiRef!

    „Oh you won’t just be able to join the EU, so you’re better off staying in the Union so you can benefit from our EU membership.“

    THEN THE CUNTS VOTED TO LEAVE!

  5. 5555555555558653 on

    It’s mad how Ballymena is universally the worst place on the island of Ireland on basically everything.

    Voting to sanction themselves to own the freestaters.

  6. Suitable-Tough5877 on

    Why would someone whose only interests are Malaysian food and American reality TV suddenly post some nine year old Brexit ragebait?

  7. Intelligent-Mud6320 on

    These two-colour chlorepleth maps always make it look polarised. Look at the figures. In most areas the vote is fairly split. Thus, to make it black and white (or in this case red and blue) ignores that important nuance. There was a huge minority (almost a majority) in England to remain, and in Scotland almost 4 in 10 Scots voted to leave.

  8. TheLordLambert on

    In 2016 when the results of the referendum were coming in I, an expat who did not vote in the referendum (I applied for the papers to do so but they got lost in the mail), tweeted my support that my home town voted for Brexit.

    I was an idiot. I was wrong. I am thankful that I was too lazy to follow up and reapply so I could actually vote, so I don’t have that own goal on my conscience.

  9. Imagine growing up a remain voter in that deep red patch in the east of England.

    Some of us don’t have to imagine 🤮

  10. Nice_Conversations on

    Look at our beautiful blue in Scotland. I’m still angry we were forced out of the EU against our wishes. Dragged down because too many people elsewhere believed the lies and propaganda.

  11. Typical_Warthog_2660 on

    It’s wild that such a massive, permanent decision was made on such a razor-thin margin without a clear supermajority. The whole „take back control“ promise has just left everyone, including Leave voters, with less control and fewer opportunities. Honestly, the regional breakdown just shows how this divided the country along lines that had little to do with the actual consequences.

  12. Last year in a Uni lecture, one of the lecturers was talking about the course and how it worked much better when we’re were still in the European Union, he then said I’m not going to judge you on how yous voted.

    None of us voted since the referendum was rushed because younger people were likely to vote remain. Cheers for that old people another thing you’ve nicked from us

  13. amievenrelevant on

    “Brexit means Brexit” amazing how these guys were in charge for like 15 years

    And now the idiot who started all this nonsense is leading in the polls

  14. CigsAndAlcohol13 on

    “Brexit was a disaster”

    It wasn’t, the people that tried to stop it and redo it and annul it made it political chaos. It was a good thing

    And good for Europe; they can pursue their further integration without Britain trying to stop it

  15. TheTiddyQuest on

    I’ve been to the part of the country that has 70% or more in favour of leaving, didn’t see or speak to any migrants once. Just a bunch of locals and farmers.

    One hundred perfect it was them being tricked into thinking that immigrants are taking over the country, yet they’ve never even met one.

  16. cragglerock93 on

    The strange alliance of the young, the more highly (formally) educated (if you find that pejorative, I can only say that it’s true), the Scottish, the nationalist Irish, and the wealthier.

  17. DeltexRaysie on

    Different world then. Nobody could have predicted the shite storm the US has become. It put “global “ trade markets into protectionism and that was opposite from the benefits of Brexit.

  18. The referendum is one of many examples that due to England’s sheer population size, other constituent countries in the United Kingdom do not really matter.

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