Agreed, Maisie and foxie.
I know it's a small sample, but Fiona Bruce always says that the Question Time audience is representative, and Nigel Farage didn't get anywhere near as much applause for his answers as Alistair Campbell did for his defence of the government, or the audience chap who, having visited the Holocaust Museum, warned against far right rhetoric persuading us to ignore the warnings of History. The 'lady in red' got no applause either, and the woman sitting next to her's face was a picture when she said she 'didn't believe in asylum''. I don't think the 'mood of the country' is as anti-Labour as people on here say, although I recognise that we all live in 'bubbles', so I might be missing something.
I do mix with a wide range of people though, and on the whole there is definitely a predominant 'wait and see' feeling, and although most older people are annoyed at the WFP withdrawal, young ones think the money is better targeted to the needy than given the aged of all income levels. My constituency is traditionally Labour, but my home town is very Tory, and has been for years, so I would expect to hear much more anti-Labour voices than I am doing.