I voted Conservative, and I maintain that was the best of a terrible bunch at the time, I certainly don't regret doing so.
However I do have great objections to how the Conservative party is being run at the moment, Dominic Cummings made them a laughing stock after his outing to Barnard Castle, and both lockdown and mandatory masks both go against the ideals of a free market, specifically that it should not be government regulation which decides this but consumer choice. Privatisation of industry encourages competition and thus challenges sectors to improve - or, in an ideal world it should do. The way the Conservatives currently go about privatising (for instance, some NHS treatment and diagnosis is now run by private companies) they simply outsource to the private company who offers the lowest bid instead of encouraging several providers to set up shop and compete for business which instead of promoting a drive for better service creates a race to the bottom. Promoting individual choice would help support a return to normality, and encourage us to go out and support the ailing high street.
I can't abide by Labour under Starmer, I sympathise that he has been left stuck between a rock and a hard place with the allegations of anti-semitism within the party however the way the Rebecca Long-Bailey situation was handled was nothing short of farcical - if we sacked every senior politician who had at some point shared some 'fact' that actually turned out to be wrong we'd have nobody running the country. Starmer has previously shown support for free movement to be retained or reintroduced after leaving the EU, a further smack in the face to previous long-term Labour voters who ditched Labour because of their (lack of) Brexit stance. And his perceived inaction on Trans rights is unforgivable at a time when he is in opposition and the government are trying to roll them back. Even if Labour could lead us out of the coronavirus situation I don't believe Labour would lead us out in any way which I could agree with.
Farage, well at the very least you know what you're getting with him which is more than can be said for a lot of politicians, even if in his case it isn't necessarily always in a positive way. I couldn't see any way Farage could lead us out of this without causing more damage than has already been done as he comes across as a strong leader, just not necessarily directing the country in the right direction.
In short, I don't trust any one of them to lead us out of this in an effective way. Again it boils down to Least Worst and I don't know, perhaps that is actually Johnson.