

Like honestly, where is one meant to go from that!? Of course, the tweet itself has received a huge reaction and everyone wants the hard facts behind this statistic."What is the EU?" is the second top UK question on the EU since the #EURefResults were officially announced pic.twitter.com/1q4VAX3qcm
— GoogleTrends (@GoogleTrends) June 24, 2016
@GoogleTrends how many people asked the question? — Stephanie Findlay (@SJFindlay) June 24, 2016
@GoogleTrends Its a bit late to be asking "What is the EU" and "Which countries are in the EU". Looks like some voters were well informed!
— Alex (@Mul_Alexander) June 24, 2016
@GoogleTrends @stephbreakfast can you break this down geograpgically, what % was searched for from England? — The Real Mr Gray (@sjagray) June 24, 2016As if that wasn't enough to take it, other voters have expressed regret at their choice to vote Leave, now that reality has sunk in.
the amount of people i'm seeing on the news who REGRET voting to leave during #Brexit is INSANE. how do you not know WHAT you're voting for?
— Smokey Stouvr (@SmokeyStouvr) June 24, 2016
? https://t.co/MGHgNNGvkg — Dexit Cashin (@Tweet_Dec) June 24, 2016
I personally voted leave believing these lies and I regret it more than anything, I feel genuinely robbed of my vote???
— gibbo (@rambogiblet) June 24, 2016
Seriously? Some #Brexit voters saying they regret voting leave and would vote remain next time? When will there be a next time? — Kate♡ (@crazy_moon) June 24, 2016
The backlash to Brexit has already started gaining momentum: sooner or later, britons will regret en masse the pro Leave ballots cast.
— Gastón E. Nusimovich (@gastonnusimovic) June 24, 2016