One of the few measured commentaries yesterday:
Historian and constitutional expert Lord Peter Hennessy looks back at British history to evaluate the significance of the referendum result. The Attlee Professor of Contemporary British History at Queen Mary University of London was speaking to the BBC's Diplomatic Correspondent James Robbins.
Link:http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politic...endum-36625209

One of his passages:
The only thing comparable in my lifetime is the end of the British Empire, which, like this, was a huge geopolitical shift. But getting rid of the British Empire was done over many, many years and by and large in the time control of the British government of the day. It left very few scars on us.But this is sudden. This is guillotine time. This is quite extraordinary and in peacetime British history quite unprecedented.
One of better journalists who actually goes outside the London "bubble" for The Guardian:
Brexit is about more than the EU: it’s about class, inequality, and voters feeling excluded from politics. So how do we even begin to put Britain the right way up?
Link:http://www.theguardian.com/politics/commentisfree/2016/jun/24/divided-britain-brexit-money-class-inequality-westminster?

I admire Peter Oborne's writing and in a rather futurist article he predicts much. He starts though with:
It is a revolution by ordinary British people against a grasping political class which gave us Black Wednesday, the Iraq War and the financial crash of 2008. Essentially, this is a revolt by the provinces against London and the poor against the rich.
Link:http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/ar...nths-hold.html

A LSE academic has an obituary for David Cameron and what politics could become:http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpo...tical-chancer/