No public appetite for deregulation post-Brexit according to new polling for IPPR
The scope of any trade agreement with the EU is contingent on the extent of future regulatory alignment, so the choice facing the Government is critical. If the UK does diverge from EU rules and standards post-Brexit, it would need to find another country or trade bloc to which it can align, the most likely option being the US.
But the polling shows that across a range of consumer, financial, employment and environmental legislation, a considerable majority of the public want to keep the current standards in place, or go further than the minimum requirements specified by EU legislation.
Only relatively small proportions of the public are in favour of reducing or removing standards: 14% want to either loosen or remove the current Working Time Directive rules, and only 9% want to raise or remove the cap on bankers’ bonuses.
There is strong support for EU-derived standards among both Remain and Leave voters. For instance, only 5% of Remainers and 5% of Leavers support the loosening or removal of consumer cancellation rights. There is only 17% support for loosening or removing the Working Time Directive among Leavers.
In fact, in some areas the public supports stronger standards – most notably, in environmental policy and financial regulation. 58% support a tougher cap on bankers’ bonuses, while 48% support stronger renewable energy targets.
The polling further shows that:
- 73% of the public support retaining or strengthening the Working Time Directive
- 84% of the public back keeping or extending consumer cancellation rights
- 79% of the public want to maintain or lower the cap on bankers’ bonuses
In each of these cases, the strongest support for tighter regulations comes from different demographic groups. In the case of renewable energy targets, there is particularly strong support for tighter regulations among 18-24 year olds and Londoners. In the case of the cap on bankers’ bonuses, there is particularly strong support among older and retired groups. Therefore, while the vast majority of the public is in favour of high standards, there are some differences among respondents on particular issues, with young Londoners appearing to favour greater environmental protections and older respondents appearing to favour tighter regulations targeted at financial elites.
Also read IPPR’s report The shared market: A new proposal for a future partnership between the UK and the EU.