Astronomers don't really use UTC for pointing telescopes though, they use sidereal time. A sidereal day is 4 minutes different from a mean solar (UTC) day, so you still have to do a conversion.
You still need something that keeps track of the Earth's rotation, but presumably the ITU will still keep track of the difference between UT1 and UTC. I'm an (ex-) astrophysicist, but I'm not convinced that astronomy would actually be particularly impacted if leap seconds would stop being applied to UTC. You already need to keep a leap second table, it would just shift where you apply it.
You still need something that keeps track of the Earth's rotation, but presumably the ITU will still keep track of the difference between UT1 and UTC. I'm an (ex-) astrophysicist, but I'm not convinced that astronomy would actually be particularly impacted if leap seconds would stop being applied to UTC. You already need to keep a leap second table, it would just shift where you apply it.