I found it interesting because he refused to be drawn down the polarisation route that the misguided referendum has led us down.
The referendum per se was wrong in principle, started for the wrong reasons, conducted in the wrong ways etc.
One of the unfortunate results is that we have lost the middle way. I would count myself as walking along that middle way. I recognise the good things that have come from being a part of the EU, but also recognise its many flaws and dangers. The referendum did not allow for such views: you were either for it (in which case you could pat yourself on the back for being a liberal-thinker) or you were against it (in which case you were a "swivel-eyed" racist).
This is one of the reasons that I opposed the referendum. It discouraged rational analysis because opening one's mouth to suggest that the "EU Project" might be flawed in any way resulted in accusations of small-mindedness and racism. It did indeed smack of communist ideology where you either had to be entirely for it or entirely against it. And where expansion was the name of the game.
There were and are many people who felt let down by the EU and more particularly by our own government whose preoccupation from Thatcher onwards has been to prop up capital and big international business as the expense of "ordinary" people.
The payback for this has been Brexit, because these people felt that this was their chance to give these elites a bloody nose. Not what the referendum was for of course, but what it came to be - and what, if anyone in power had had an ounce of political nowse, would have been blindingly obvious.
I have recently read two very interesting books, one on America and Trump by John Sopel (the BBC US correspondent) and one on Brexit by Robert Peston. They both come to exactly the same conclusion which is that Trump and Brexit are the result of political elites, wedded to international finance, who simply did not listen to those who were drawing the short straw in their countries.
What a mess for all.
The EU has been a boon; but it has also gone astray in many ways: inevitably it is a behemoth - how could it be otherwise as it grows?; it has not listened to those with concerns, particularly about immigration - you do not have to be a racist and you can embrace our multi-cultural society to also think that some form of border controls make sense.
And what happens in this situation? Those who do not have a voice latch on to extreme parties which they feel will represent them. It is scary.
The level of debate about the EU and Brexit is pitiful. There is no listening,only firing.
We are indeed in a sorry mess, but until there is more listening than firing insults we will get nowhere.