Party policies a total of 479 MPs publicly declared their intention to vote in favour of remaining in the European Union compared with just 158 MPs who declared their intention to vote in favour of leaving the European Union. The tables list political parties with representation in the
House of Commons or the
House of Lords, the
European Parliament, the
Scottish Parliament, the
Northern Ireland Assembly, the
Welsh Parliament, or the
Gibraltar Parliament at the time of the referendum.
Great Britain Northern Ireland Gibraltar Minor parties Among minor parties, the
Socialist Labour Party, the
Communist Party of Britain,
Britain First, the
British National Party (BNP),
Éirígí [Ireland], the
Respect Party, the
Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition (TUSC), the
Social Democratic Party, the
Liberal Party,
Independence from Europe, and the
Workers' Party [Ireland] supported leaving the EU. The
Scottish Socialist Party (SSP),
Left Unity and
Mebyon Kernow [Cornwall] supported remaining in the EU. The
Socialist Party of Great Britain supported neither leave nor remain and the
Women's Equality Party had no official position on the issue. The
Socialist Equality Party called for an "active
boycott" of the referendum.
Cabinet ministers The
Cabinet of the United Kingdom is a body responsible for making decisions on policy and organising
governmental departments; it is chaired by the Prime Minister and contains most of the government's ministerial heads. Following the announcement of the referendum in February, 23 of the 30 Cabinet ministers (including attendees) supported the UK staying in the EU.
Iain Duncan Smith, in favour of leaving, resigned on 19 March and was replaced by
Stephen Crabb who was in favour of remaining. Crabb was already a cabinet member, as the
Secretary of State for Wales, and his replacement,
Alun Cairns, was in favour of remaining, bringing the total number of pro-remain Cabinet members to 25.
Business Various UK multinationals have stated that they would not like the UK to leave the EU because of the uncertainty it would cause, such as
Shell,
BT and
Vodafone, with some assessing the
pros and cons of Britain exiting. The banking sector was one of the most vocal advocating to stay in the EU, with the
British Bankers' Association saying: "Businesses don't like that kind of uncertainty".
RBS warned of potential damage to the economy. Furthermore,
HSBC and foreign-based banks
JP Morgan and
Deutsche Bank claim a Brexit might result in the banks' changing domicile. According to
Goldman Sachs and the
City of London's policy chief, all such factors could impact on the City of London's present status as a European and global market leader in financial services. In February 2016, leaders of 36 of the
FTSE 100 companies, including Shell,
BAE Systems, BT and
Rio Tinto, officially supported staying in the EU. Moreover, 60% of the
Institute of Directors and the
EEF memberships supported staying. Many UK-based businesses, including
Sainsbury's, remained steadfastly neutral, concerned that taking sides in the divisive issue could lead to a backlash from customers.
Richard Branson stated that he was "very fearful" of the consequences of a UK exit from the EU.
Alan Sugar expressed similar concern.
James Dyson, founder of the
Dyson company, argued in June 2016 that the introduction of tariffs would be less damaging for British exporters than the appreciation of the pound against the Euro, arguing that, because Britain ran a 100 billion pound
trade deficit with the EU, tariffs could represent a significant revenue source for the Treasury. Pointing out that languages, plugs and laws differ between EU member states, Dyson said that the 28-country bloc was not a
single market, and argued the fastest growing markets were outside the EU. Surveys of large UK businesses showed a strong majority favoured the UK remaining in the EU. Small and medium-sized UK businesses were more evenly split. Two large car manufacturers,
Ford and
BMW, warned in 2013 against Brexit, suggesting it would be "devastating" for the economy. Conversely, in 2015, some other manufacturing executives told Reuters that they would not shut their plants if the UK left the EU, although future investment might be put at risk. The CEO of
Vauxhall stated that a Brexit would not materially affect its business. Foreign-based
Toyota CEO
Akio Toyoda confirmed that, whether or not Britain left the EU, Toyota would carry on manufacturing cars in Britain as they had done before.
Exchange rates and stock markets In the week following conclusion of the
UK's renegotiation (and especially after
Boris Johnson announced that he would support the UK leaving), the pound fell to a seven-year low against the dollar and economists at
HSBC warned that it could drop even more. At the same time, Daragh Maher, head of HSBC, suggested that if Sterling dropped in value so would the Euro. European banking analysts also cited Brexit concerns as the reason for the Euro's decline. Immediately after a poll in June 2016 showed that the Leave campaign was 10 points ahead, the pound dropped by a further one per cent. In the same month, it was announced that the value of goods exported from the UK in April had shown a month-on-month increase of 11.2%, "the biggest rise since records started in 1998". Uncertainty over the referendum result, together with several other factors—US interest rates rising, low commodity prices, low Eurozone growth and concerns over emerging markets such as China—contributed to a high level of stock market volatility in January and February 2016. On 14 June, polls showing that a Brexit was more likely led to the FTSE 100 falling by 2%, losing £98 billion in value. After further polls suggested a move back towards Remain, the pound and the FTSE recovered. On the day of the referendum, sterling hit a 2016 high of $1.5018 for £1 and the FTSE 100 also climbed to a 2016 high, as a new poll suggested a win for the Remain campaign. Initial results suggested a vote for 'Remain' and the value of the pound held its value. However, when the result for
Sunderland was announced, it indicated an unexpected swing to 'Leave'. Subsequent results appeared to confirm this swing and sterling fell in value to $1.3777, its lowest level since 1985. On the following Monday when the markets opened, £1 sterling fell to a new low of $1.32. Muhammad Ali Nasir and Jamie Morgan two British economists differentiated and reflected on the weakness of the Sterling due to the weak external position of the UK's economy and the further role played by the uncertainty surrounding Brexit They reported that during the week of the referendum, up to the declaration of the result, exchange rate depreciation deviated from the long-run trend by approximately 3.5 per cent, but the actual immediate effect on the exchange rate was an 8 per cent depreciation. Furthermore, that over the period from the announcement of the referendum, the exchange rate fluctuated markedly around its trend and one can also identify a larger effect based on the "wrong-footing" of markets at the point when the outcome was announced. Upon opening later on the Friday after the referendum, the US
Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped nearly 450 points or about 2½% in less than half an hour. The
Associated Press called the sudden worldwide stock market decline a
stock market crash. Investors in worldwide stock markets lost more than the equivalent of
US$2 trillion on 24 June 2016, making it the worst single-day
loss in history, in absolute terms. The market losses amounted to US$3 trillion by 27 June.
Sterling fell to a 31-year low against the US dollar. The UK's and the EU's sovereign debt
credit ratings were also lowered to AA by
Standard & Poor's. By mid-afternoon on 27 June 2016, sterling was at a 31-year low, having fallen 11% in two trading days, and the FTSE 100 had surrendered £85 billion; however, by 29 June it had recovered all its losses since the markets closed on polling day and the value of the pound had begun to rise.
European responses The referendum was generally well-accepted by the European far right.
Marine Le Pen, the leader of the French
Front national, described the possibility of a Brexit as "like the
fall of the Berlin Wall" and commented that "Brexit would be marvellous – extraordinary – for all European peoples who long for freedom". A poll in France in April 2016 showed that 59% of the French people were in favour of Britain remaining in the EU. Dutch politician
Geert Wilders, leader of the
Party for Freedom, said that the
Netherlands should follow Britain's example: "Like in the 1940s, once again Britain could help liberate Europe from another totalitarian monster, this time called 'Brussels'. Again, we could be saved by the British." Polish President
Andrzej Duda lent his support for the UK remaining within the EU. Moldovan Prime Minister
Pavel Filip asked all citizens of Moldova living in the UK to speak to their British friends and convince them to vote for the UK to remain in the EU. Spanish foreign minister
José García-Margallo said Spain would demand control of
Gibraltar the "very next day" after a British withdrawal from the EU. Margallo also threatened to close the border with Gibraltar if Britain left the EU. Swedish foreign minister
Margot Wallström said on 11 June 2016 that if Britain left the EU, other countries would have referendums on whether to leave the EU, and that if Britain stayed in the EU, other countries would negotiate, ask and demand to have special treatment. Czech prime minister
Bohuslav Sobotka suggested in February 2016 that the Czech Republic would start discussions on leaving the EU if the UK voted for an EU exit.
Non-European responses International Monetary Fund Christine Lagarde, the managing director of the
International Monetary Fund, warned in February 2016 that the uncertainty over the outcome of the referendum would be bad "in and of itself" for the British economy. In response, Leave campaigner
Priti Patel said a previous warning from the IMF regarding the
coalition government's deficit plan for the UK was proven incorrect and that the IMF "were wrong then and are wrong now".
United States In October 2015,
United States Trade Representative Michael Froman declared that the United States was not keen on pursuing a separate
free-trade agreement (FTA) with Britain if it were to leave the EU, thus, according to
The Guardian newspaper, undermining a key economic argument of proponents of those who say Britain would prosper on its own and be able to secure bilateral FTAs with trading partners. Also in October 2015, the
United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom Matthew Barzun said that UK participation in NATO and the EU made each group "better and stronger" and that, while the decision to remain or leave is a choice for the British people, it was in the US interest that it remain. In April 2016, eight former
US Secretaries of the Treasury, who had served both
Democratic and
Republican presidents, urged Britain to remain in the EU. In July 2015, President
Barack Obama confirmed the long-standing US preference for the UK to remain in the EU. Obama said: "Having the UK in the EU gives us much greater confidence about the strength of the transatlantic union, and is part of the cornerstone of the institutions built following
World War II that has made the world safer and more prosperous. We want to make sure that the United Kingdom continues to have that influence." Some Conservative MPs accused U.S. President
Barack Obama of interfering in the Brexit vote, with
Boris Johnson calling the intervention a "piece of outrageous and exorbitant hypocrisy" and UKIP leader
Nigel Farage accusing him of "monstrous interference", saying "You wouldn't expect the British Prime Minister to intervene in your presidential election, you wouldn't expect the Prime Minister to endorse one candidate or another." Obama's intervention was criticised by Republican Senator
Ted Cruz as "a slap in the face of British self-determination as the president, typically, elevated an international organisation over the rights of a sovereign people", and stated that "Britain will be at the front of the line for a free trade deal with America", were Brexit to occur. More than 100 MPs from the Conservatives, Labour, UKIP and the
DUP wrote a letter to the U.S. ambassador in London asking President Obama not to intervene in the Brexit vote as it had "long been the established practice not to interfere in the domestic political affairs of our allies and we hope that this will continue to be the case". Two years later, one of Obama's former aides recounted that the public intervention was made following a request by Cameron. Prior to the vote, Republican presidential candidate
Donald Trump anticipated that Britain would leave based on its concerns over migration, while Democratic presidential candidate
Hillary Clinton hoped that Britain would remain in the EU to strengthen transatlantic co-operation.
Other states In October 2015, Chinese President
Xi Jinping declared his support for Britain remaining in the EU, saying "China hopes to see a prosperous Europe and a united EU, and hopes Britain, as an important member of the EU, can play an even more positive and constructive role in promoting the deepening development of China-EU ties". Reuters reported in June 2016 that the Chinese government was worried about an EU without Britain being weaker, particularly in its role as a counterbalance to the United States. In February 2016, the finance ministers from the
G20 major economies warned for the UK to leave the EU would lead to "a shock" in the global economy. In May 2016, the Australian Prime Minister
Malcolm Turnbull said that Australia would prefer the UK to remain in the EU, but that it was a matter for the British people, and "whatever judgement they make, the relations between Britain and Australia will be very, very close". Indonesian president
Joko Widodo stated during a European trip that he was not in favour of Brexit. Russian President
Vladimir Putin said: "I want to say it is none of our business, it is the business of the people of the UK."
Maria Zakharova, the official Russian foreign ministry spokesperson, said: "Russia has nothing to do with Brexit. We are not involved in this process in any way. We don't have any interest in it."
Economists In November 2015, the Governor of the
Bank of England Mark Carney said that the Bank of England would do what was necessary to help the UK economy if the British people voted to leave the EU. In March 2016, Carney told MPs that an EU exit was the "biggest domestic risk" to the UK economy, but that remaining a member also carried risks, related to the
European Monetary Union, of which the UK is not a member. In May 2016, Carney said that a "technical recession" was one of the possible risks of the UK leaving the EU. However, Iain Duncan Smith said Carney's comment should be taken with "a pinch of salt", saying "all forecasts in the end are wrong". In December 2015, the Bank of England published a report about the impact of immigration on wages. The report concluded that immigration put downward pressure on workers' wages, particularly low-skilled workers: a 10 per cent point rise in the proportion of migrants working in low-skilled services drove down the average wages of low-skilled workers by about 2 per cent. The 10 percentage point rise cited in the paper is larger than the entire rise observed since the 2004–06 period in the semi/unskilled services sector, which is about 7 percentage points. In March 2016, Nobel prize-winning economist
Joseph Stiglitz argued that he might reconsider his support for the UK remaining in the EU if the proposed
Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) were to be agreed to. Stiglitz warned that under the
investor-state dispute settlement provision in current drafts of the TTIP, governments risked being sued for loss of profits resulting from new regulations, including health and safety regulations to limit the use of
asbestos or tobacco. Germany with its 'social market' economy stands midway between the French
dirigiste economic model and the British free-market economic model. From the German viewpoint, the existence of the liberal bloc allows Germany to play-off free-market Britain against
dirigiste France, and that if Britain were to leave, the liberal bloc would be severely weakened, thereby allowing the French to take the EU into a much more
dirigiste direction that would be unattractive from the standpoint of Berlin. The Law Society's own report into the possible effects of Brexit notes that leaving the EU would be likely to reduce the role played by the UK as a centre for resolving disputes between foreign firms, whereas a potential loss of "
passporting" rights would require financial services firms to transfer departments responsible for regulatory oversight overseas.
World Pensions Forum director M. Nicolas J. Firzli has argued that the Brexit debate should be viewed within the broader context of
economic analysis of EU law and regulation in relation to
English common law, arguing: "Every year, the British Parliament is forced to pass tens of new statutes reflecting the latest EU directives coming from Brussels – a highly undemocratic process known as '
transposition'... Slowly but surely, these new laws dictated by EU commissars are conquering English common law, imposing upon UK businesses and citizens an ever-growing collection of fastidious regulations in every field".
Thiemo Fetzer, professor of economics from
University of Warwick, analyzed the welfare reforms in the UK since 2000 and suggests that numerous austerity-induced welfare reforms from 2010 onwards have stopped contributing to mitigate income differences through transfer payments. This could be a key activating factor of anti-EU preferences that lie behind the development of economic grievances and the lack of support in a Remain victory. Michael Jacobs, the current director of the Commission on Economic Justice at the Institute for Public Policy Research and Mariana Mazzucato, a professor in University College London in Economics of Innovation and Public Value have found that the Brexit campaign had the tendency to blame external forces for domestic economic problems and have argued that the problems within the economy wasn't due to 'unstoppable forces of globalisation' but rather the result of active political and business decisions. Instead, they claim that orthodox economic theory has guided poor economic policy such as investment and that has been the cause of problems within the British economy.
Institute for Fiscal Studies In May 2016, the
Institute for Fiscal Studies said that an EU exit could mean two more years of austerity cuts as the government would have to make up for an estimated loss of £20 billion to £40 billion of tax revenue. The head of the IFS, Paul Johnson, said that the UK "could perfectly reasonably decide that we are willing to pay a bit of a price for leaving the EU and regaining some sovereignty and control over immigration and so on. That there would be some price though, I think is now almost beyond doubt."
Lawyers A poll of lawyers conducted by a legal recruiter in late May 2016 suggested 57% of lawyers wanted to remain in the EU. During a Treasury Committee shortly following the vote, economic experts generally agreed that the leave vote would be detrimental to the UK economy.
Michael Dougan, Professor of European Law and
Jean Monnet Chair in EU Law at the
University of Liverpool and a constitutional lawyer, described the Leave campaign as "one of the most dishonest political campaigns this country [the UK] has ever seen", for using arguments based on constitutional law that he said were readily demonstrable as false.
NHS officials Simon Stevens, head of NHS England, warned in May 2016 that a recession following a Brexit would be "very dangerous" for the National Health Service, saying that "when the British economy sneezes, the NHS catches a cold." Three-quarters of a sample of NHS leaders agreed that leaving the EU would have a negative effect on the NHS as a whole. In particular, eight out of 10 respondents felt that leaving the EU would have a negative impact on trusts' ability to recruit health and social care staff. In April 2016, a group of nearly 200 health professionals and researchers warned that the NHS would be in jeopardy if Britain left the European Union. The leave campaign reacted by saying more money would be available to be spent on the NHS if the UK left the EU.
British health charities Guidelines by the
Charity Commission for England and Wales that forbid political activity for registered charities have limited UK health organizations' commentary on EU poll, according to anonymous sources consulted by the Lancet. According to
Simon Wessely, head of psychological medicine at the Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London – neither a special revision of the guidelines from 7 March 2016, nor Cameron's encouragement have made health organisations, willing to speak out. The EU's
Common Fisheries Policy was mentioned as a central reason for their near-unanimity.
Historians In May 2016, more than 300 historians wrote in a joint letter to
The Guardian that Britain could play a bigger role in the world as part of the EU. They said: "As historians of Britain and of Europe, we believe that Britain has had in the past, and will have in the future, an irreplaceable role to play in Europe." On the other hand, many historians argued in favour of leaving, seeing it as a return to self-sovereignty.
Exit plan competition Following
David Cameron's announcement of an EU referendum, in July 2013 the
Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA) announced the "Brexit Prize", a competition to find the best plan for a UK exit from the European Union, and declared that a departure was a "real possibility" following the 2015 general election. Iain Mansfield, a
Cambridge graduate and
UKTI diplomat, submitted the winning thesis:
A Blueprint for Britain: Openness not Isolation. Mansfield's submission focused on addressing both trade and regulatory issues with
EU member states as well as other
global trading partners. ==Opinion polling==