Pro-Brexit people: what kind of EU reform would it take to make you want to remain?

I was 50/50 until pretty much right up until I put my pencil to the ballot to vote.

The only thing I can personally fault with the EU (for the UK) is the freedom of movement.

If you haven't lived in an area which has been affected by the influx of Eastern Europeans in the past few years, you may not understand how difficult it can be to have so many people enter an area so quickly, particularly when living in a 'poor area'.

The area has become saturated with rented terrace properties designed to fit 2 people with families of 5 or more. There has been an immense rise in the amount of fly-tipping and overall complete change in the local culture.

Particularly when a lot of people are themselves coming from poor backgrounds, you are essentially shifting the problem that comes from that country to here in the UK. The criminality for example.

That's not to say we haven't seen a benefit such as an increase in small businesses but arguably the positive factors are outweighed by the negatives. I can imagine others throughout the UK who have seen the impact likely feel the same way.

So to answer your question, it would be ending or at least limiting the movement of people.

/r/ukpolitics Thread