It is very limited and concerns a very small minority. One idiot wearing a "get out" t shirt, some pretty horrid graffiti and some verbal assaults, all lapped up by the BBC and the press. The losers love to throw the racist word around and give the impression that England is 1930's Germany.
We are an extremely tolerant people in the main, but in some areas, that tolerance has been stretched to breaking point. Gormless morons like Corbyn do not assist the situation.
Whilst the hate crimes in the aftermath of the referendum have indeed been appalling, the accusations that Leavers are predominantly racist are clearly rubbish. Yes, there are some racists among Leave supporters but that, as you roghtly say, is very much a minority contingent. Corbyn's problem isn't dishonesty or abrasiveness but ineffectuality, so I don't think that he can reasonably be blamed for failure to stem a rising tide of hate crimes following the referendum
At the moment, however, there are no "winners" or "losers", not least because Parliament now appears ever more confused as to what to do with the situation that the party of government has alone created, largely because of the unexpected nature of the result. If you're going to hold a referendum on something this importnat, the one thing that's vital is to have a detailed plan of campaign in place for either outcome well in advance of the vote; it's all too painfully clear that this is not the case.
The Tories who created this mess are now losing their leader.
The Labour Party is almost in ruins over who should replace
its leader who for the time being exacerbates this problem by refusing nevertheless to budge (unlike Cameron, who at least had the decency to offer his own resignation rather than waiting to be pushed).
The Scots who have 58 MPs are trying to leave UK as a consequence of the result (NI and Gib might do likewise).
The other parties have only around 10 MPs between them so what they say and think counts for little.
The result of the vote is by no means reflected in Parliamentary support, in that MPs from all parties with more than one MP broadly favour the side other than that which polled the most votes; in other words, there a far greater gulf between Remain/Leave MPs and Remain/Leave voters, which itself indicates a division between Parliament and people.
Whilst on divisiveness, old have been divided against young, city dwellers against others, Scots against the rest as a consequence of this referendum.
The history behind this mess is as follows.
The Tories called a referendum that was unnecessary and for which there was no evidence of public appetite; do you disagree?
The referendum was called on the grounds of Tory fears of the rise of UKIP and defections to it from UKIP, which is not the premise upon which to hang a referendum about UK's continued EU membership; apart from an increase in the number of votes polled by UKIP in 2015, is there any evidence of the Tories' fears having any foundation?
The campaign was run largely on lies and acrimony.
The terms and conditions were far too lax; no minimum turnout and a 50/50 basis, so the referendum could technically have been won on a 20% turnout by a single fraudulent vote; can the much-vaunted "will of the people" be said to be reflected in and represented by that?
And now no one appears to have a clue what to do, either in UK or EU, although clearly it's up to UK to make the first move.
Public spending cuts and tax rises have been threatened by government and, on this occasion, understandably, since the costs of undoing and reshaping 40+ years of lawmaking, changing everyone's passports, the ultimate demise of the EHIC facility and heaven alone knows what else will all have to be met somehow and only the UK taxpayer will be liable for them; it's not up to anyone else to pay for this and I don't somehow see a Greek-style or UK-bank-style bailout from EU just because they're now fed up to the back teeth with UK and are anxious to get rid of it.
Does all of that sound true to you? If so, does it sound anything like a "win" to you?
Unpopular though a Parliamentary rejection of the result would inevitably be (which is probably why there seems so far to be little appetite for it), this would at least be the simplest and cleanest way to clear up at least some of the current mess and restore some stability; OK, it would leave all the eggs in England on the faces of every MP, but since there are already so many such eggs on so many such MP's faces in any case, I'm not so sure that this would be such a bad thing.
In the sadly unlikely event that Parliament were to exercise its statutory right to do this, it would trigger immense anger and discontent, especially (though not exclusively) among Leavers and there would then be a widespread call for a second referendum. Whilst the first one was unnecessary, such a second one would be very much necessitated by the messy outcome of the first one in order to settle matters once and for all in a wholly democratic way, with much tougher terms and conditions such as the 75%+ turnout and 60%+ majority to validate it. Were it to attract, say, a 77% turnout and a 63% vote in favour of Leave, I would very much regret it but I would accept it without question on the grounds that it would unarguably be conclusive. Even then, however, I'm not sure that Parliament would know what to do next, but at least it would have had a couple of months or so in which to get their heads together and figure that out!
Best,
Alistair