One of the fundamentals is that it was a secret ballot i.e. it is none of our business if somebody doesn't/does tell us why they did/didn't vote. Therefore any speculation as to why somebody acted the way they did is utterly futile.BearTricks":6m2vb0rj said:I'll have to live with it Phil, a lot longer than you.
Perhaps 28% weren't happy to go with the flow, but rather felt that they were too daunted and uninformed to be responsible for such a decision. I'd bet that a similar proportion cast their vote based on an uneasiness about people from countries they don't know much about, and vague ideas about jobs that they overheard at the pub.
The campaigns were a shambles on both sides (I didn't even receive my 'impartial guide to voting, might reflect why my area's turnout was one of the worst in the country) and I think that even if it somehow does work out for the best, the last couple of months have been fairly shameful.
Neither you, I nor anybody else can say why 28% didn't turn up. About the only reasonable guess we can make is that they weren't sufficiently motivated to vote for whatever reason. One of the features of the campaign has been a suspicion on the part of Remain that all Brexiters are either thick, bigoted, ill-informed or a combination of all three. I've heard talk from supposedly educated, upper middle class people which proved to me that you hear things at home counties dinner parties which are as daft as things you might hear in a Geordie Pub. And of course you can hear sensible things in both places too. The point of democracy is that it is a great leveller, the vote of a chip butty eating bin man counting just as much as that of a ciabatta chomping Guardian sub-editor.
We now know what the orders of the electorate are, so it's time to start pulling together as a Nation.
I agree that the campaigns were a bit of a disgrace.