Aye, proportionally everything’s relatively alright.
However, there are 533 seats in England, meaning it is feasible for a party to focus only on England and receive the 326 seats needed to become the British government.
Average constituency population by country is 68,736The English average is 70,231 [As an aside, I wonder what happens to this one if you drop out London]
The Scottish average is 65,444
The Northern Irish average is 64,078
The Welsh average is 55,920
By numbers England is underrepresented in parliament by population, but I also get your argument that a united England could pose a threat to the meaningful participation of the UK sans England in British politics. You've got to balance democratic representation of individuals with democratic representation of nations, as painful as it is in the seuthlands.
I'm not too worried though, since the English never unite, the parties consider English seats as the least cost effective ones to campaign for, and should such an unprecedented situation occur as a lonely English British parliament, conventions and constitutions could be amended without much fuss thanks to the flexibility of the British state - whether MPs decided to do so... Another matter. I pray it will never become a tangible possibility. Even today, Theresa May's government hangs on the thread of the DUP for example.
Something which has accosted May to no end. Hilariously, pro-EU and pro-UK Tories both agree that May's paper is shit for the exact same reasons: She sought the obligations of EU membership with none of its benefits
I see what you did there.
I also don’t see the difference between the EU political class and the British political class.
The difference is the British political class get into British politics to retire in EU politics
Chances are even full Brexit won't even stop them from getting into EU politics