> Many Brits have concluded that about the EU all by themselves, based on the actual actions it's taken.
I don't know how many Brits have reached their conclusions about the EU "all by themselves", without basing their information at all on what the media and UK politicians have told them.
I meant in the sense that most newspapers and media outlets are pro EU. Yes, the few that aren't have higher circulation. You can't easily disentangle cause and effect there though: do people read these papers because they feel they're presenting a more realistic view of the EU/the world, or do they decide what a realistic view is based on the papers they read?
It's also worth remembering that broadcast media is largely pro EU, even though it's theoretically meant to be neutral. I don't know many who really believe it is though.
At any rate, it's very easy to get news very slanted towards the EU in the UK if you want it. The fact that there's alternatives is different to in most of Europe, I've noticed, where the media is near universally pro EU and anti-member state. At most in Germany the ECB gets criticised.
How are you measuring that, exactly? Here is a reasonably quantitative analysis:
https://rightsinfo.org/app/uploads/2016/06/Screen-Shot-2016-...
from this article:
https://rightsinfo.org/brexit-five-lessons/
> Many Brits have concluded that about the EU all by themselves, based on the actual actions it's taken.
I don't know how many Brits have reached their conclusions about the EU "all by themselves", without basing their information at all on what the media and UK politicians have told them.