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European majority wants Britain to stay

8572A survey released on Monday indicates that 64% of Spaniards want the UK to stay in the EU.

A majority of Europeans on the continent reject Brexit. Over 54% believe that Britain should not leave.

But it is Spain where the highest percentage was to be found hoping for the status quo, according to a poll from the Bertelsmann Foundation in Germany.

Following on were Poland where 66% want Britain to maintain its membership along with 54% of Italians.

Barely half (52%) of our old pals, the French, however, were in favour of Britain remaining.

Spain was also the country which would be least likely to vote to leave the EU in a referendum. Given the choice, 74% said they would vote to remain. For other countries, the majority was in favour of remaining, although the percentages dwindled to just 54% in Italy and 52% in France.

Spain is fearful of losing trade links in the event of Brexit. Earlier this month, a clutch of the country’s most influential business leaders sent an open letter to the Financial Times.

Fashion giant Inditex, telecoms leader Telefónica, global energy firm Iberdrola, and construction company Ferrovial, along with Santander and Sabadell banks, which have all have huge investments in the UK, expressed their concern.

“While respecting the decision of the people in the United Kingdom, we believe that a Europe without the UK would be weaker, just as the UK itself would be weaker outside Europe,” they wrote. “We believe the case for Europe has never been stronger.”

A drop in the value of sterling could limit the number of British tourists and dent the €14 billion they contribute to the economy.

As for expats, the true number in Spain could is estimated to be as high as one million


Acting prime minister Mariano Rajoy earlier this month said "a Brexit vote could mean expats losing the right to live and work in Spain."

More than 400,000 British citizens officially live and work in Spain, in comparison to 100,000 Spanish citizens who live and work in the United Kingdom, he claimed.

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Comments  

+1 #5 JJ in Gibraltar 2016-06-21 22:54
Quoting Egbert:
Nobody in southern Europe factors in actual 'effective occupation'. Actually owning and managing the means of production, not just the capital or the labour employed. As has been asked continuously for the last decade in Portugal - where are the British owner / managed businesses, particularly those in tourism ? If they exist at all it is with a Portuguese landlord or co-partner. Who, as often as not then then cheats the Brit who ends up queuing amongst the 4 million others wanting a non-existent redress in Portuguese courts.

Without the rights that the UK offers EU citizens in the UK - what is the point of UK citizens losing these rights when attempting to own and manage businesses in countries like Portugal. With its secret and totally anti-EU Pink Map feud ?


Egbert? That has to be your best (by which I mean oddest) alias yet! Keep it up!

Unfortunately, all you have to say is still garbage ...
-2 #4 Charly 2016-06-21 19:03
The UK should definitely be better off without their "lunatic politicians" as Nigel, Cameron and Johnson. How much damage did they do to the country in the last months ? And for what?
It's true: there are big problems in the EU management.,The only way to solve that is to stand up and SPEAK loud and clearely in the EU PARLIAMENT and explain and stress what is needed for a better functioning OF THE EU and its 28 member states.... exactely like the (Belgian) liberal MP Guy Verhofstad said in a TV program last Sunday. Question is... why is Guy Verhofstad not doing that by himself ? This sharade is areal shame for the EU and for the world. And it all started with the " 1953 historical mistake" where the leaders better had choosen for a POLITICAL UNION than for a nice and bourgeois economical club....
+1 #3 Chip 2016-06-21 12:23
Spain wants the UK to keep paying their bills.

Surely not.
+2 #2 Charly 2016-06-21 09:57
What does mr Egbert means ? Why might there be a restriction for doing business for English people in Portugal or in the Algarve ? I know about 5O English that are owing their own business and hundreds of them involved in tourism (unfortunately half of them are operating illegally in AL business). Whats the problem? what's the point ? One simply has to do it as the rules are simple.
0 #1 Egbert 2016-06-20 20:18
Nobody in southern Europe factors in actual 'effective occupation'. Actually owning and managing the means of production, not just the capital or the labour employed. As has been asked continuously for the last decade in Portugal - where are the British owner / managed businesses, particularly those in tourism ? If they exist at all it is with a Portuguese landlord or co-partner. Who, as often as not then then cheats the Brit who ends up queuing amongst the 4 million others wanting a non-existent redress in Portuguese courts.

Without the rights that the UK offers EU citizens in the UK - what is the point of UK citizens losing these rights when attempting to own and manage businesses in countries like Portugal. With its secret and totally anti-EU Pink Map feud ?

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