There isn't anything wrong in being of the left or of the right. I genuinely believe that both have similar aims, but different ways of reaching them, a bit like making a route option in a fell race.
It is mostly just a difference of balance between how much tax the state should take to spend on our behalf and how much the state should get involved in trying to shape our behaviour.
I think the issue for most regular voters is that the parties moved away from them.
Of those voting, the UK is roughly split in to 30% each for centre right, centre left and floater with the remaining 10% going to the fringes.
The fight over the centre ground we have seen since the mid 90s has meant Labour and Tory have largely left their core supporters homeless and been battling it out with the LibDems over the same turf, with little difference between them.
Not many have been casting a vote with genuine enthusiasm. Mostly it has been about the least bad option.
I genuinely hope we get Brexit, a proper clean one. I think it will provide the political renewal the country needs rather than the vacuous sound-bite and focus group led politics of the last 20 odd years.