ToraToraTora
You asked:
"Is it just possible that the general public are sick of the EU and all it stands for?"
I think this might be the case, but unfortunately, the general public have not been presented with a balanced argument over our membership of the EU.
I can't remember ever reading articles which explain how UK business benefits from membership...
A European Commission study of the single market in 2007 found that the EU GDP was raised by 2.2 per cent (€233 billion) and 2.75 million jobs were created between the introduction of the single market in 1992 and 2006.
For the UK, that increase in GDP would have been around £25 billion.
The single market has brought an end to many of the non-tariff barriers to trade that used to exist in Europe.
The UK, traditionally an open, free trade economy, has benefited from the fact that the EU negotiates on behalf of the world’s largest single market – giving us far greater clout in such talks than we would have as an individual nation.
Another significant benefit to the UK from EU membership is the foreign direct investment (FDI) we receive – that is, investment in our economy from non-UK sources. Companies often locate in the UK precisely because we are inside the single market – for example, Nissan’s factory in Sunderland exports to the rest of the EU. FDI has risen considerably across the world since the 1970s.
EU competition law has been of great importance in opening up previously closed markets to new entrants, enabling British companies to expand on the continent. It has also enabled market monopolies to be tackled in a way not seen before in Europe – such as the Commission’s action against Microsoft.
The European Arrest Warrant (EAW) has been very important in bringing criminals to justice across Member State borders, preventing the long delays and sometimes politicised extradition processes seen in the recent past.
A key benefit from the single market is that businesses only have to deal with one set of rules rather than 27 different sets of rules when exporting to or operating in more than one EU Member State.
I think that the current EU narrative both within and outside the popular media makes it harder for voters to make an informed decision on membership.
You see, when people say they are sick of the EU and all it stands for, could it be that they don't actually know all of what it stands for?