Poll shows strong Euroscepticism
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/world/europe/6466887.stm Version 0 of 1. In the run-up to the EU's 50th birthday a Financial Times poll has found that 44% of Europeans think life has got worse since their country joined. The FT/Harris online poll surveyed 6,772 adults in Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Spain. US citizens were also asked questions about the EU. Just 22% of the Europeans questioned thought their country should pull out of the 27-nation bloc, however. UK respondents were the most negative about the EU draft constitution. German Chancellor Angela Merkel - currently holding the EU presidency - wants to get agreement on a roadmap for EU institutional changes by June, setting 2009 as the deadline for adoption of a constitution. When asked what they associated most with the EU, 31% of the FT/Harris poll respondents said the single market, 20% bureaucracy, 9% democracy and 26% other factors. In the UK, 52% of those questioned said things had got worse since joining the EU, while in Spain 53% said life had improved. |