Tell you what's good.
People are actually turning out and voting. More so than I can recall. I live near the local polling station and it's been a constant stream of people walking past and queueing up to go into the hall and cast their vote.
It'd be great if we could have higher turnouts routinely and it wasn't such a turn up for the books.
The problem is though DTLW that like your earlier post where you talk of those who are on the leave side and "please don't vote for them."
The reality is that Farage whatever he stands for isn't fooling people into voting for him. Most of those who are voting his way aren't racist at all. The problem is that the main parties have just brushed off people's genuine concerns while letting things continue and Farage has given them a voice and something to vote for. If the reds, blues and yellows had not ignored this "protest" element and actually tried to address the issues people spoke of rather than ignore it then Farage would still be that tiny little protest element never to be worried about.
Political parties in the future need to realise that they cannot continually ignore the "plebs" because the "plebs" have votes and I am not sure that a lot of those that have crossed over from the mainstream parties, including all the UKIPers that voted Tory to get the referendum will ever return to the mainstream parties.
It is scary that UKIP got 4m votes even though a lot of those voters they already had voted Tory to get a referendum.
I think a lot of people in this country that aren't right at the bottom struggle to realise just how much an effect migration has had on the lower paid lower skilled classes. A lot of people are insulated from that effect because they don't live in the same communities, they aren't fighting for the same jobs and they only see the benefits of it so it is very easy for the political parties to convince those that are insulated that the "plebs" are shouting about nothing.
The reality is that on the estates people who used to work the land, used to work in factories, used to clean are struggling to get those jobs and Labour's attempts at educating the population out of poverty was an extremely naive idea.
My parents don't understand it because they are insulated from it and of course with them being retired professionals the vast majority of the people they socialise with are insulated too. There has been a new class of sorts created just below the middle classes since the early nineties that are quite comfortable and while they are in reality working class they are not experiencing living in streets alongside Eastern Block migrants and they aren't having to compete for NMW jobs with migrants.
At the bottom it is an unfair dogfight where the Brits struggle to even apply for these jobs and while you can quite rightly state that everybody is having to compete with migrants in the job market (as seen in the IT sector) the scale is nothing like it is at the bottom and no-one is calling unemployed IT workers "lazy Brits" like they are the people that did do the jobs that the political class would like you to believe that the British won't do.