I do wonder if any Brexit voter ever really believed that the benefits to the UK would appear overnight? Me? I did not vote for Brexit because I believed we would be joyriding rainbows the next day. I voted for Brexit because it was how I would have voted had John Major not betrayed the country and refused a referendum on the Maastricht Treaty back in 1992. If he had done so then, the country would have said no to joining (Major knew this, which is why he refused it) and we would have moved from the EEC (which I fully approved of) to an EEA trade agreement with the EU, similar to Norway, et al. Where we would still be now. But no, such a thing would not provide UK politicians with the gravy train they desired, or the 'legacy' they felt they were entitled to (very amusing that Major's legacy is more about his shagging Edwina Curry than about taking the UK into the EU). So, Brexit was my vote from 1992. Okay, so I hold a grudge. But, in my defence, I never watched or listened to any of the campaign garbage from either side. Life is too short for that rubbish and, anyway, what was the point of the promises being made or of Project Fear when no negotiations had even been started? Post-Brexit, I will admit to holding a lingering fantasy which was to go to London, steal a big red bus and run down that . who stood there every day shouting 'Stop Brexit'. Then reverse and repeat a few times just to make sure.
So, having been out for 5 minutes and seen our economy smashed by a pandemic that was so badly handled by our Government (I refer back to what I think will happen at the next GE: incompetent dinosaurs out, incompetent dinosaurs in) we now have the equivalent of the Westminster gob (no offence intended, Jacob, I am not thinking specifically of you) screaming at us to 'name one benefit of Brexit' as if Brexit was a gameshow. Admittedly, it is the only string Europhiles have left in their bow, but (IMHO) it is too early to demand tangible evidence of anything. Come back and ask again in 10 years when we will have been through a half-decent economic cycle and will have some data to measure against. Even better, wait 40 years and, if you are still unhappy, fight for a referendum. You will get one. Politicians just love gravy trains (a lot more than they give a dung about their country, it seems). Anyhow, just my tuppence worth. I will say no more on this thread.
PS: I turned my first bowl today, made from green ash and dried in a dehydrator before finishing. I am very happy.