'No one in the UK seems happy over Brexit': Reporter Clovis Casali

ONP Summary
Ten years after the 2016 referendum, Britain's departure from the European Union has produced economic contraction and unfulfilled promises rather than the anticipated improvements. Public opinion has shifted decisively, with the majority now viewing the vote as wrong, while the political landscape has grown increasingly turbulent and nationalist, ironically amplifying the populist sentiments that originally drove the referendum.
Moderate: Centrist outlets emphasize the economic damage, failed campaign promises, and widening gap between expectations and reality. They highlight political instability, warn that similar populist movements threaten the European project, and note the original referendum relied on misinformation.
Conservative: Conservative-leaning outlets either defend the decision despite public disapproval or report the opinion shift more factually, generally resisting the centrist consensus that the vote was fundamentally mistaken.
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As the UK marks a decade since the Brexit vote that took it out of the European Union, our reporter who's been back to gauge the mood in the UK says no one seems happy with the result.
To mark the anniversary, FRANCE 24 filmed a special edition of our Revisited programme, talking to some of those most affected by the decision.
Clovis Casali says he found that those who voted to remain are still unhappy that the UK is now no longer an EU member, while those who voted to leave say politicians let them down after the referendum and the hard Brexit they wanted never happened.
He spoke to us in Perspective. ...