Quote Originally Posted by longway View Post
Quote Originally Posted by Troy View Post
Quote Originally Posted by longway
I do hope this poll proves to be right. It really looks as if the British people are seeing through b.s., they are not falling for the scare mongering, and the attempts to capitalise on the lady's death are back firing badly.
Perhaps, just perhaps, many who were asked for their views, just after Cox had been murdered, told the pollster to politely bugger off and that was put down as a 'don't know'.
18 June 2016: New batch of polls suggest result is in the balance

A series of of new referendum polls released on Saturday evening suggest that the result still hangs in the balance.
Online polls by Opinium and YouGov suggest the two sides are neck and neck.
Opinium for the Observer has both remain and leave on 44%.
YouGov has published two polls. For the Sunday Times it has Remain one point up; for ITV it has Leave two up.
Survation has published the only telephone poll of the evening for the Mail on Sunday. It has Remain up by three points.
It's difficult to say with any confidence whether these new polls represent a significant change.
But perhaps they suggest that the momentum enjoyed by Leave over the last couple of weeks has, for the time being at least, stalled.

How does it feel?

ComRes has also published an interesting poll for the Independent and Sunday People, although not with referendum voting intention figures.
It asked people about the emotions they would feel depending on the referendum outcome.
Significantly more people said they'd be delighted if Leave wins (44%) than if Remain wins (28%).
A Leave victory would also disappoint fewer people.
However, it would also make more people anxious.
Some 41% of people said a Leave victory would cause them anxiety compared to 33% for a Remain victory.

16 June 2016: Leave trend continues

Two more polls published today confirm the trend of a significant shift to leave.
And they're particularly striking because they're both telephone polls conducted by companies who have previously had remain ahead - sometimes with substantial leads.
Ipsos MORI now give leave a 6 point lead. Survation have them 3 points ahead.
Two further polls - one internet, one telephone - are expected overnight tonight.
EU referendum poll tracker - BBC News