NS
Yes I would agree that the people who voted Leave are responsible for the reasonably foreseeable or predicted positive and negative consequences of their vote.
I think it is the responsibility of those who vote to research and educate themselves to the possible outcomes, weigh up the likelihood of the positive and negative consequences before they vote.
For some Leave voters, the negative economic consequences for others in their community such as people losing jobs, was less important than trying to stop political union or free movement of labour within the EU.
On Panorama some people said they had voted Leave even though they thought they would be economically worse off in the short-term and could lose their jobs. They thought it would be beneficial to their kids in the long term as the ability to limit immigration that they hoped for by voting Leave would mean the existing infrastructure in Britain would not be put under even more strain with additional new people coming into the country. They thought this meant there would be more chance of their kids having access to the limited infrastructure that Labour and Tory governments were not investing in sufficiently, such as school places, university places, apprenticeships, health.