Over the years, people here and elsewhere have been told that we live in a democracy and that we have to respect whatever that democracy decides to do at any given time.
Actually we live in a
representational democracy in which we vote for the people who make the decisions not on the decisions directly. There's good reason for that: the population is generally not properly informed and subject to wild prejudice. If the country was run as a true democracy, we would have no taxes and a mandate for great hospitals and schools at the same time.
The last few days have shown how hollow that can be, as we have had staunch supporters of democracy questioning the benefits of the result of the EU referendum.
You can't have a democracy (true or representational) without discussion of the rights and wrongs of the issues of the day. People complaining that the referendum result was wrong is not anti-democratic, it is the sign of healthy democracy.
Clearly we have all now got to make everything work, but I hope that folk here realise how some others have felt about some of the directions consecutive Governments have chosen to take this country in, over the years.
If I get your implication correct, i.e. the Leave vote was, in part, a protest vote against "consecutive governments", then it is a good demonstration of why representational democracy works better than direct democracy.