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British voters want out of EU

LONDON, Nov. 18 (UPI) -- More than half of British voters would vote to leave the European Union in a referendum if they could, an Opinium Research LLP/Observer survey indicates.

Of those surveyed, 56 percent said they would probably or definitely vote for Britain to split from the EU, as anti-EU sentiment sweeps all three main political parties in the country, The Observer reported Saturday.

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About 68 percent of Conservative voters said they would leave the EU and 44 percent of Labor voters and 39 percent of Liberal Democrats agreed.

Voters ages 18-34 were the only age group in which a majority backed the EU, with 44 percent preferring to maintain membership and 25 percent wanting out.

The poll comes as Prime Minister David Cameron prepares for a Brussels summit, scheduled to begin Thursday, to negotiate a deal on the EU budget. Cameron initially said he wanted a freeze on EU spending, but pressure in Britain is leading him to ask for a reduction in spending, a position no other EU country will likely support, The Observer reported.

The number of people surveyed and the margin of error were not reported.

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