The full article is worth a read. Ipsos Mori is the UK's second largest market research company.
Quote:
The detailed survey of 4,000 voters by Ipsos Mori, conducted over the course of the past year and published on Tuesday, identifies the disparate groups that make up the Leave and Remain camps, as well as those who fall somewhere in between.
The Financial Times has looked at the groups and assessed how their characteristics and experiences influenced their votes for or against Brexit.
Education levels, attitudes towards immigration and the rural-urban divide emerge the strongest factors when all groups are considered, while others, such as age, social class and party allegiance had a more nuanced effect on voter behaviour.
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https://www.ft.com/content/61c12868-...8-73d59db9e399
---------- Post added at 14:02 ---------- Previous post was at 13:58 ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mick
No it doesn't and no they aren't two different things at all.
Like another MP replied to him in the clip, The 'Better Educated' voted for remain, is a connotation for those who voted leave are thick.
Anyway, I like the following reply to him...
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There's plenty of less well-educated people I know who are cleverer than those who have gone to university. The two are entirely different things and people shouldn't take offence when none is intended. That's political correctness gone mad!