I took the poll to be asking the ideal situation long-term, not just during the current crisis.
On that basis, 'long-term' is a lot longer than some imagine if you mean when there is no longer a risk of rises in infections.
Nobody here knows how far ahead thast is but personally I would guess about 2 years at least. So assumimg 2 years is the case, then the following issues will have moved forward:
The progress in the government's commitment to a net carbon-zero economy by 2050
The three months of minimal carbon emissions from road traffic and aircraft has given people a unique view of a cleaner environment, with lower local air pollution and reduced noise levels. Effectively we have sampled the environment further down the curve of carbon reduction. That won't be lost on most people, and will make it more difficult for carbon burning dinosaurs to paint those who care about the environment as optimistic tree huggers chasing an impossibe dream.
Mass unnecessary commuting habits
At first, there were shrieks of horror from managements who just didn't trust the workers that they themselves had taken on if they couldn't see them. As the weeks went on, there were plenty of comments that that view was more an inadequacy in the management than the employers, and many took to working at home as efficiently of better. With the reward that successful homeworking is a win-win result for both employees and employers, there is a general presumption that those that can work at home should, (despite Johnson trying to say that it is employees'' 'duty' to crowd into city centres to provide profits for cafe's and pubs near workplaces). Once the expensive provision of offices and commuter transport is redirected to better equip homeworkers, we stand a chance of a genuine increase in productivity in the UK, something that we have lagged the rest of Europe on for decades. Reduction of commuting volumes will also feed into the drive for a carbon neutral economy as well.
The necessity for a quarantined population to keep away from shops selling non-essential products and limit the number of essential shopping expeditions has boosted the mail/online-order volumes to higher levels than ever before. The constant wringing of hands about how the high streets are dying is just a continuation of the last 20 years commentary. They were going anyway, - the pandemic has just pushed us a little faster down the curve. There's no going back on that.
The rapid rise of online services has also telescoped the change. Telephone triages with GPs were already increasing. The need to remove as much face to face consultations as possible has ushered in the age of video sessions with GPs and other medical health providers. Soon, they will be the norm rather than a quick fix for the COVID-19 restrictions. Many more people will see the value of not travelling to the surgery/hospital, and just like happened with telephones in the last 100 years, some form of internet connected audio-visual communication device will become as commonplace in normal homes as phones are now.
This is my undertanding of the 'new normal'* and everyone not living in a cave will be affected by it. Pushing against those aspects that don't appeal will be pointless.
*for those who object to the term
'new normal', then just call it
'normal' because that is what it will be like.