ADAM PEARCE and KARL RUSSELL
Britons voted on Thursday to leave the European Union. The Leave side led with 17.4 million votes, or 52 percent, versus the Remain side’s 16.1 million, or 48 percent, with a turnout of around 72 percent. Related Article

SCOTLAND
Should Britain remain in
the European Union?
Remain
Leave
80%
50%
Edinburgh
Belfast
Manchester
Liverpool
IRELAND
ENGLAND
WALES
Birmingham
Oxford
Cardiff
London

Leave
Remain
Should Britain
remain in the E.U.?
50%
80%
50%
80%
SCOTLAND
ENGLAND
N. IRELAND
WALES
London

Should Britain remain in the European Union?
Remain
Leave
80%
50%
Northern Ireland shares a completely porous border with Ireland, which is in the European Union. Trade issues could arise between the two.
SCOTLAND
The Scottish first minister has said that a leave vote could trigger a referendum vote in Scotland to leave Britain. Scots rejected independence in a referendum in September 2014 by 55 percent to 45 percent.
Edinburgh
Belfast
ENGLAND
Manchester
London, along with Scotland,
led the vote to remain in the
European Union, though the
east side of the city voted to
leave.
Liverpool
IRELAND
WALES
Birmingham
Oxford
Cardiff
The majority of Wales voted strongly to leave, except for the largest city Cardiff, which voted to remain by 60 percent.
London
| Scotland | The Scottish first minister has said that a leave vote could trigger a referendum vote in Scotland to leave Britain. Scots rejected independence in a referendum in September 2014 by 55 percent to 45 percent. |
|
62% REMAIN |
|
| N. Ireland | Northern Ireland shares a completely porous border with Ireland, which is in the European Union. Trade issues could arise between the two. |
|
55.8% REMAIN |
|
| Wales | The majority of Wales voted strongly to leave, except for the largest city, Cardiff, which voted to remain by 60 percent. |
|
47.5% REMAIN |
|
| London | London, along with Scotland, led the vote to remain in the European Union, though a minority of districts voted to leave. |
|
59.9% REMAIN |