John Curtice wrote recently about how the Labour leader could limp to power backed by the LibDems and the SNP.
Meanwhile, Labour continue to oppose progress at every turn.
When the referendum is over, it will be politics as normal – and we still have battles to fight.
Last Thursday’s elections were almost unique in my adult political lifetime.
We have long believed that those who build wealth in our nation should be able to pass on the fruits of their work to their children and grandchildren.
The so-called kinder, gentler politics that the Labour leadership claims to espouse masks an undercurrent of anti-Semitism and bigotry.
We must fight hard in the Mayoral, Scottish, Welsh, Police and Crime Commissioner and local government elections.
I will also work to make sure that when we have the result, when the people of this country have decided its future, that we still have a united Party.
The new leadership’s ideas look like the first sketches of a manifesto that’s more Socialist Worker than New Labour.
During my hours in the Commons as Leader of the House, I see mainstream Labour MPs failing to challenge the extremism that now holds sway.
The Labour Party has fallen prey to the hard left. It is our job to make sure it never gets near office again.
The ideology that now lies at the heart of Labour would be deeply damaging to this country – it must be defeated.
No Government should be able to force laws on England against the wishes of English MPs.
From the many role models at senior levels to a boom in grassroots support, our Party is reaching groups whose core values are Conservative.
Much of everyday life will look the same outside the EU – but we will have more freedom to make our own laws and our own decisions.