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A major Mirror survey has revealed the first signs Brits could be regretting voting for Brexit .

Our poll of 44,000 people was hosted on Mirror.co.uk and more than 50 affiliated local news websites, from arch-Remain Cambridge to top Brexit city Stoke-on-Trent.

In nearly every area, more people who chose Brexit would now vote Remain than the other way round.

Weighting the replies against how people voted at the time, we projected Remain would narrowly win a referendum re-run.

Here's a bit more detail behind that projection, and how things were split in the biggest cities across the UK.

(Image: Reuters)

We've copied out the main results for every city that had a sample size of more than 300, or you can search all areas in our interactive graphic.

Most would have voted the same way overall - but our survey projects the result would have just tipped from Leave to Remain in two major cities.

Both Nottingham and Birmingham would have crossed the divide, our survey suggests.

GRAND TOTALS

44,681 total sample size:

35,020 in England

1,911 in Wales

4,322 in Scotland

1,164 in Northern Ireland

The rest in other countries led by USA (873), Spain (318) and Germany (146).

13.5% of Leavers would now vote Remain

Out of all people who told us they voted Leave on 23 June 2016, this is the percentage who now say they would vote Remain.

9.3% of Remainers would now vote Leave

Out of all people who told us they voted Remain on 23 June 2016, this is the percentage who now say they would vote for Brexit.

Would SWITCH from Leave (51.9%) to Remain (51.2%)

The first figure is the percentage of all those voting on 23 June 2016 who backed Brexit; the second is the projected percentage of all those voting who would now back Remain if the referendum was held again, based on our survey results.

More overall stats

21.3% feel more positive after PM set out her Brexit plans, 25.8% feel less positive and 52.9% feel the same

52.6% say border control more important than access to the single market; 47.4% say the other way round

54.7% expect UK to break up within a decade and 44.9% don't

48.4% want a second referendum on the terms of Brexit and 51.3% don't

Respondents were 35.4% female and the rest were male

Most impressive leader since the Referendum

Respondents were the following ages:

6.5% 18-24

18-24 20.3% 25-34

25-34 26.3% 35-44

35-44 24.2% 45-54

45-54 14.4% 55-64

55-64 8.2% 65-plus

What was the method?

A random selection of visitors to our network of websites were presented with a Google Survey.

Each user would only see the survey once, and would be required to fill in their location, age and gender before getting to the main questions.

There were 7 main questions:

If a referendum was held again on exiting the European Union, would you vote differently to how you voted in last year's EU referendum? (and how would you vote differently?) How did you vote last year? Following Theresa May's speech setting out her plans for Brexit, are you more or less confident about the future of Great Britain? What is more important to you? Immigration control or access to the single market? Do you expect the break up of the United Kingdom to now happen in the next decade? Do you think there should be a referendum on whether the UK should accept the terms of whatever Brexit deal is negotiated? How well do you think each of these politicians have handled the Brexit debate since last year? [Rating 1-5 - 1 being very poor, 5 very well] - see results above

Search your area...

... Or see the biggest cities below

London

8,351 total sample size

15.1% of Leavers would now vote Remain

9.8% of Remainers would now vote Leave

Would STILL vote Remain (60.8%)

Birmingham

1,302 total sample size

16.2% of Leavers would now vote Remain

9.7% of Remainers would now vote Leave

Would SWITCH from Leave (50.4%) to Remain (53.3%)

(Image: Birmingham Mail)

Glasgow

1,274 total sample size

14% of Leavers would now vote Remain

10.1% of Remainers would now vote Leave

Would STILL vote Remain (65.2%)

Manchester

884 total sample size

16.3% of Leavers would now vote Remain

7.2% of Remainers would now vote Leave

Would STILL vote Remain (63.3%)

Liverpool

852 total sample size

14.5% of Leavers would now vote Remain

10.3% of Remainers would now vote Leave

Would STILL vote Remain (58.3%)

(Image: Dave Ellison / Alamy)

Bristol

765 total sample size

15.7% of Leavers would now vote Remain

9.9% of Remainers would now vote Leave

Would STILL vote Remain (62%)

Newcastle

648 total sample size

11% of Leavers would now vote Remain

8% of Remainers would now vote Leave

Would STILL vote Remain (52.4%)

Stoke-on-Trent

648 total sample size

12.5% of Leavers would now vote Remain

10.3% of Remainers would now vote Leave

Would STILL vote Leave (62.9%)

(Image: Getty)

Belfast

558 total sample size

15.9% of Leavers would now vote Remain

11.5% of Remainers would now vote Leave

Edinburgh

525 total sample size

11.2% of Leavers would now vote Remain

10% of Remainers would now vote Leave

Would STILL vote Remain (69.9%)

Nottingham

473 total sample size

13.5% of Leavers would now vote Remain

11.5% of Remainers would now vote Leave

Would SWITCH from Leave (50.8%) to Remain (51%)

Cambridge

434 total sample size

9.7% of Leavers would now vote Remain

3.3% of Remainers would now vote Leave

Would STILL vote Remain (74.6%)

(Image: Getty)

Leeds

405 total sample size

11.5% of Leavers would now vote Remain

8.8% of Remainers would now vote Leave

Would STILL vote Remain (52.3%)

Coventry

394 total sample size

13.2% of Leavers would now vote Remain

10.3% of Remainers would now vote Leave

Would STILL vote Leave (53.3%)

Middlesbrough

363 total sample size

12.5% of Leavers would now vote Remain

13.3% of Remainers would now vote Leave

Would STILL vote Leave (61.1%)

Cardiff

353 total sample size

13.4% of Leavers would now vote Remain

9.9% of Remainers would now vote Leave

Would STILL vote Remain (60.2%)