I don't think the new regulations aim at a more aerodynamic (less draggy) lead car, although it might be due to a couple of cleaner surfaces and the lack of bargeboards, etc.
What they aim to do is to move the disturbed air (turbulence plus forward movement) from the leading car upwards, where the following car won't intercept it. The following car would intercept relatively more calm and slow air that moved in from the sides, and thus lose less downforce. Yes, this should result in less tow, possibly much less tow... at the same distance.
The idea is that the lesser tow will be compensated by entering the straight much closer to the car in front, so that even if, overall, the tow provided by the car in front is 50% smaller everywhere, the following car can be in a region, much closer to the leading car, where it is hopefully two times as strong due to that, so that the effects compensate each other.
I think one thing is missing in the discussion: the current difficulty to pass in a straight (without DRS) is not only because the following car starts so far behind, say 10 car lenghts, that the tow is never enough. It is also because the following car, lacking downforce, accelerates at a later point in the track. Thus, the tow is asked not only to make up for the initial distance, but also for the following car being, say, 15km/h slower at the same point in the track at the beginning of the straight. That initial speed deficit means that half the straight is gone before you even stop losing ground to the car ahead.
The new regs should result in this speed deficit being much smaller, so that the effective length of straight to provide a speed plus from the tow is larger.
IMO.