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Answer Overview

Response rates from 336 Classical Liberalism voters.

68%
Yes
32%
No
51%
Yes
23%
No
10%
Yes, but more priority should be given to food safety and environmental protection
4%
No, but we should adopt a unilateral free trade policy
7%
Yes, but with more transparency
3%
No, I support free trade but do not support this agreement
2%
No, this will incentivise companies to move jobs out of the country

Historical Support

Trend of support over time for each answer from 336 Classical Liberalism voters.

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Historical Importance

Trend of how important this issue is for 336 Classical Liberalism voters.

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Other Popular Answers

Unique answers from Classical Liberalism voters whose views went beyond the provided options.

 @5947KQCfrom Leeds  answered…4yrs4Y

Yes, but only if food safety and environmental legislation is kept to a strict standard i.e., the EU standard rather than lowering to the US standard

 @4VQTBLMfrom Nottingham  answered…4yrs4Y

If the US adapt their crops to adhere to EU GA rules and regulations and EU Data Protection laws are kept.

 @9QK54D2answered…5mos5MO

No, we should focus on a new and tailored trade partnership between the UK and the US, that suits us both. The EU is not a factor.

 @9M5W96Kanswered…7mos7MO

Yes, but those goods that are traded through the TTIP, the suppliers will need to operate with increased transparency with the UK taking priority on suppliers with high quality food safety standards and environmental protection policies.

 @9JNGGBDanswered…10mos10MO

while the bureaucracy isn't good, the way the world is currently sees such partnerships as common practice. Ideally I'd say no, practically I'd say yes.

 @9FN8PSZanswered…1yr1Y

Not currently as no deal with the USA is an equal one and safety/environment is compromised

 @9FJM24Nanswered…1yr1Y

Only if the deal is good for the uk good trad links with the eu is more important