ks.234
Half way to Infinity
Apologies for another Brexit Thread, but as this question is more about the impact on the United Kingdom it is I feel a slightly different question that could get lost in the general quagmire of Brexiticity.
My question is prompted from something raised in the Week in Westminster on R4 today in which a speaker suggested that the majority of red wall voters identified themselves as English first, rather than British. Other pro Brexit grouped also identified themselves as English as distinct from British
Does this mean that Brexit is dominated by a sense of English identities rather than greater British identities?
Is the ideology of Brexit a logical first step to the break up of the United Kingdom and NI?
Should the 'better alone' principle be applied to the UK and NI?
My question is prompted from something raised in the Week in Westminster on R4 today in which a speaker suggested that the majority of red wall voters identified themselves as English first, rather than British. Other pro Brexit grouped also identified themselves as English as distinct from British
Does this mean that Brexit is dominated by a sense of English identities rather than greater British identities?
Is the ideology of Brexit a logical first step to the break up of the United Kingdom and NI?
Should the 'better alone' principle be applied to the UK and NI?