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Statistics are shown for this demographic

Answer Overview

Response rates from 2.8m UK voters.

15%
Yes
85%
No
8%
Yes
78%
No
7%
Yes, replace it with a bill of rights that gives the UK more legislative control
7%
No, but criminals should lose many of these rights

Historical Support

Trend of support over time for each answer from 2.8m UK voters.

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Historical Importance

Trend of how important this issue is for 2.8m UK voters.

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Other Popular Answers

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

 @9FRFHMSanswered…2yrs2Y

Yes, but replace it with a reformed version codified and agree by referendum and parliament vote and blocked from being removed or amended by parliament without another referendum

 @4VNQ2BSfrom East Sussex  answered…4yrs4Y

No, but criminals should lose rights depending on the severity of their crime/crimes.

 @9N33YJVanswered…11mos11MO

Only for people who committed crimes against children, rape or sexual assault or any other crime that can fall under this category

 @8JYNF9Panswered…5yrs5Y

People who have committed crimes inflicted on children and vulnerable people, such as sex crimes, homicide, etc, should loose these rights.

 @9RR2JLYanswered…9mos9MO

Yes, it should be layered. The HRA has been taken advantage of by non-citizens. Not every person who steps on our soil should be afforded the same rights

 @9QMY8JManswered…10mos10MO

No, however criminals of serious crimes like rape, intentional murder for no reason , Paedophiles, child sex traffickers should have all or most of these rights taken away.