//Which is why I consider talk of Boris disappointing Brexit voters, if he gets in, very unlikely to be true//
In order to avoid disappointment we have two cases, OG: a renegotiated deal which is separation without vassalage and war reparations, or out with no deal. The EU will not accept the first, and Boris or Hunt haven't got the bottle to go for the second.
This leaves a fudge and the Tory party cuffed, and the main challenge to a Boris premiership which is how long he can defer a general election and keep his new flat. Without a real Brexit we know from the EU elections that the Tory vote has collapsed to less than 30%. Which gives the remain party (Corbyn) the reins of power, innit?