Well, the French began their election last week and won't have a result until today, i think, so why should we rush to appoint a government? It's been clear to everyone that Labour would form the new administration for months now and all this election has done is illustrate how many people were fed up with Tory incompetence over the last ten years...and counting.
I glanced at stats for the age of Tory voters and the majority are over 65. Labour are mostly in the 20-50 bracket, but a telling number are switching to Reform and the Green parties at both ends of that age range, people who're dissatisfied with the choice of maintaining the status quo, where the gap between rich and poor will keep growing so long as things stay the same. They're not fooled by the slogans and have become more militant in demanding real change for their future. I wouldn't say an alliance is likely but an agreement on campaigning for a form of PR would suit both Reform and the Greens, so if they can make a persistent case perhaps the LibDems could dust off their old inquiry into electoral reform and form a coalition to reinforce the question in the HoC.
It took the Belgians about two years to form a government, didn't it, and the country ticked over just the same. The UK civil service would do likewise, i'm sure.