I can;t help feeling the doubt that any profesional politician will ever want to share power - power is what they're about.
What I've noticed most about politics over the years is the tension between pragmatism and ideological purity.. At the height if Covid, when it was ldear that thibgs could not go on as normal, Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak took a path of relative pragmatism in not only imposing a lockdown, but putting in place the furlough scheme to lessen the financial strain of paying employees for not working and nesuring that those who couldn't work through no fault of their own received some pay. Their reward was to be criticised for not being 'Conservative enough' (ie not letting people make their own decisions about self-isolating etc). The upshot has been their replacement by the 'ideologically pure' Truss and Kwarteng - and we see where that is leading!
The problem being that a pragmatic attitude will always do better in meeting emergencies and solving problems. Ideological purity limits the options available.