• As I said, you're in a small minority in changing your Labour-voting behaviour because of Labour 'respecting' the referendum result--I'm certain very few people will do this.

    What are you basing this on? The 86% of Labour voters who want a second referendum?

  • As I said, I think I've read a couple of studies about this, but I can't find them now (#classicInternetexcuse). They were probably reported on in Guardian articles. The main upshot was that Labour-voting 'Remain' supporters were significantly less likely not to vote Labour because of the party's stance on this (in large part because they had nowhere else to go (except, perhaps, in the very few constituencies where Labour are up against the Lib Dems)) than Tory voters would be to vote Tory in the same scenario, but also because they mainly, positively, supported Labour's programme for government.

    There are gazillions of studies on whether people support 'Leave' or 'Remain' and how that has changed, but it seems far fewer on how that has affected actual voting.

    Here's an article I just found, on the 2017 general election result (but can't remember seeing before)--obviously, things have moved on since then:

    https://www.opinium.co.uk/labour-approach-brexit-reassure/

    There's no date on it, so I don't know when it was published. I also don't know if Opinium is credible or some kind of sock puppet.

    There's another article linked from this which likewise says what I've been saying:

    https://www.opinium.co.uk/labour-approach-brexit-keep-options-open/

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