The Brexit effect: the UK citizens’ attitudes in the years following the referendum
Date
2021
Authors
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Journal ISSN
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Publisher
Tartu Ülikool
Abstract
According to the rational choice theory, political parties seek to maximise their utility in
gaining extensive support of the electorate. Hence, after the Brexit referendum 2016, the
Conservative party was supposed to strategically encompass Eurosceptical policies -
which correspond to the electorate’s demand - and secure its capacity to cope with the
Brexit negotiations and delivering the withdrawal. In parallel, the Labour party was
heavily criticised for the party leader’s vague position on the issue, insufficient and
lacklustre work, and poor criticism of the Conservatives. Therefore, there is an
assumption that the issue of Brexit caused aligning the two major political parties with
the electorate in the context of the withdrawal.
This Master’s thesis examines how the two major parties reacted to and aligned with the
voters’ political demands to secure the state’s economy, control the influx of
immigrants, and reform the UK-EU relations in light of Brexit. Three waves of
European Social Survey data sets were selected, which made it possible to track how the
two parties started encompassing the European issues in the context of the Brexit
negotiations. In the logistic regression models built for 2012, 2016, and 2018, the
increasing inter-parties gap, i.e. polarisation was revealed, concerning the key policy
dimensions linked to the Brexit process. Over the timespan, the differentiation has
become much clearer, meaning that the Conservative party - by securing its position as
the party delivering Brexit - responded to the political requests of a concrete segment of
the electorate demanding to “Get Brexit Done”. In opposite, the Labour party did attract
voters (in the aftermath) with a lower level of economic satisfaction and rather positive
attitudes towards immigrants and European integration.