Agreed. The election may also confirm the ‘Americanisation’ of our politics. Socially progressive, liberal and outward looking metropolitan cities and areas and more socially conservative and inward looking town and rural areas. Whereas the popular vote may swing toward one demographic our system may favour the the other which will also feed into future tensions.
The dynamic in Scotland, Wales and NI may also counter the trend in England leading to more tensions on our Union (and that’s ignoring the particular pressure NI will bring in the next few years as we struggle to implement what we have signed up for with the WA).
Add in social care, health care, demographics and how our system can only function if it has an influx of people wanting to come and work and make a home here and it’s difficult to see how a Johnson Govt, largely spent of talent and ideas, can adequately address any of the issues. Not that it is pretending it can given its vision of the future is to largely ignore or lie about the issues which it seems we are happy to buy. The reality is, post December 13th, is that there are 27 other countries that have a say in our future and as NI found out they seem to have a bigger say than countries within our own Union.