Two-thirds
of EU citizens back UK rejoining bloc, survey finds
Poll also
finds three quarters of people in Britain want closer ties, with majority
accepting free movement
Jon
Henley Europe correspondent
Sun 21
Jun 2026 06.00 BST
Two-thirds
of EU citizens would back Britain rejoining the bloc, while most UK voters say
Brexit has been bad for the issues they care about and want closer ties,
including levels of integration – such as free movement – long seen as toxic, a
survey has found.
Ten years
after the Brexit referendum, the polling by the European Council on Foreign
Relations (ECFR), a thinktank, found 66% of respondents across 15 countries
felt UK membership was a very good, good or “neither a good nor a bad” idea.
The
average comfortably exceeded those favouring a closer relationship (59%) or the
status quo (46%). Support for rejoin ranged from lows of 56% in Bulgaria and
59% in France and Italy to highs of 75% in the Netherlands and Denmark.
Even
voters for far-right and EU-critical parties said they would support closer
relations between the bloc and the UK, including a majority of backers of
Poland’s Confederation (71%), Germany’s AfD (58%) and France’s National Rally
(58%).
Many
European leaders have reflected this view. France’s president, Emmanuel Macron,
has said the door is “always open” and Spain’s prime minister, Pedro Sánchez,
has said Spain would “absolutely” support British membership.
Alexander
Stubb, Finland’s president, has explicitly named the UK as a candidate for
membership, saying: “We need a UK voice in Europe. We really miss you guys.” In
May, the European Green party formally invited the UK to rejoin.
In the
UK, the polling, carried out in May, found voters across party lines, including
supporters of Reform UK, believed Brexit had had a negative impact on the
country and on many key issues at the heart of the debate a decade ago.
British
respondents said leaving had hit their main priorities: the cost of living
(66%), the economy (65%), youth opportunity (57%), illegal immigration (56%)
and trade (56%). Even most leave voters (58%) said Brexit had made illegal
immigration worse.
Asked to
identify the primary benefits of Brexit, the most common response, by a wide
margin, was “don’t know”, followed closely by “none of the above” – suggesting
most British voters now feel Brexit did real damage for no apparent upside.
That
overwhelmingly negative verdict on the decision to leave translates into a
strong desire for a closer relationship with the bloc: 75% of UK respondents
were in favour. Asked about trade and economic ties, 66% said they should be
very or slightly closer.
Perhaps
most strikingly, a large majority (63%) of respondents – including 57% of those
who voted leave in 2016 – said they would now accept freedom of movement in
exchange for closer trading ties, with only 18% rejecting it.
Even
among voters who said their top concern was immigration, 44% said they would
back freedom of movement as part of a closer economic relationship, suggesting
one of the core drivers of the Brexit vote is no longer central to the UK
debate.
The
report’s author, Mark Leonard, the director of the ECFR, said the polling
showed the EU was open to the UK’s return and that the British public had
fundamentally moved on from 2016 – meaning Europe was now a political
opportunity for the UK government.
“Brexit
was the insurgent vehicle for a nation rejecting the status quo,” he said. “A
decade on, Brits realise their hopes for a better life outside the EU are
unfulfilled and Brexit is undermining the UK’s ability to manage the issues
they care about most.”
Leonard
added that the data showed the “vast majority of citizens are open to a closer
relationship”, revealing the existence of a “very broad permissive consensus
for going far beyond the government’s current reset”.
The
report identified three main voter camps in the UK: “optimists” (28%) who view
European alignment as a geopolitical necessity; “realists” (35%) who support
closer ties but still value US ties; and “loners” (27%) who still prioritise
national sovereignty.
Overall,
the survey found British voters favoured Europe over the US as a preferred
security partner, with just 18% now viewing the US as an ally and 58% favouring
closer defensive relations with Europe, compared with 19% for the US.
A
majority of British voters do not want to buy more weapons from the US, while
more than 60% would prefer to follow a “buy European” policy. Almost two-thirds
(63%) also want the UK to participate in developing an alternative European
nuclear deterrent.
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