I voted leave. I would again. Not to say I don't have major misgivings about the way the process is being managed (the recent "war cabinet" meeting to decide what the governments priorities in negotiations are should have been done long ago, ideally before the triggering of article 50, for example) but the reasons I had for voting leave have not changed. I'm an unskilled worker with very little prospect of that changing anytime soon, so supply and demand at the bottom of the labour market is important to me, and the current low wage, low productivity economic model (at the bottom of the labour market, at least) we've had for basically all of my working life is no good to me at all, I am lucky in that the more adverse trading conditions the UK (possibly) will face won't really have much of an effect either way. I wasn't "duped" by the 350 million NHS bus (because anyone who thought that Gove, Johnson et al. had suddenly undergone a Pauline conversion to champions of public services really can't be paying attention). I'm not, I think, racist, if I were, why would I want to reduce immigration from countries that have populations comprised almost entirely white people who regularly vote in governments that are racist (or at the very least nationalist?). The debate for if continued access to the single market is better/worse than trade deals the UK could do alone is so complex, with so many variables that I doubt anyone can make a definitive "open and shut" case either way, because it depends on what the UK can negotiate with who, as well as what the EU can negotiate and with who, as well as any future changes with tariffs, and the possible list of combinations of all of those variables is almost limitless. I could go on, but the basic point I'm trying to make is that I voted with an educated guess as to what outcome was going to serve my interests best, as did many leave voters, and many remain voters. It's not a matter of right and wrong, as so many people seem to think. It's a matter of where you stand being a reflection of your circumstances, but since the referendum all both sides seem to want to do, despite all the talk of talking to the "other side" and trying to unite the country, is talk past each other and preach to the converted. And that's sad.