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Luredreier
TLDR News EU
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Comments by "Luredreier" (@Luredreier) on "Germany's New Coalition: The Traffic Light Coalition Explained - TLDR News" video.
Good. I'm glad that the greens got that in, but also that they're being realistic enough to have some flexibility included. I hope that the energy companies takes this into account and invest accordingly. (I'm a green voter in my own country, I'm not German). But at the same time by not having a fixed commited date they're flexible enough that they can adjust a little bit if things go wrong, in order to avoid too many people having their lives destroyed, giving people a chance to adapt to the changes.
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Honestly it's not really that chaotic. Yes, Swedes aren't used to a goverment being forced to run while using the budget proposal of another political party. But it's not that odd. The upcomming Swedish prime minister simply needed another confirmation that the parliament did indeed want to give her a mandate to rule, even through it didn't give her a mandate to use her own partys budget proposal.
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@yusteryumeister4601 This is fundamentally a UK news channel. So it's natural that their coverage of the UK is more accurate then that of non-anglophone countries. They're doing a good job researching things. But unlike big news outlets they don't have people on the ground. Big outlets do have people on the ground, but have limited funding pr reported news compared to the cost of their total staff, so while they of course have individual news that's extremely well researched because it's deemed important there's also going to be lower priority news that's covered but where the news are reported without as high quality research as would have been required for a 100% accurate news story. Different outlets will have different prioritization of different topics, so you'll get the best coverage by using multiple sources. Ideally from multiple nations.
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@Tzar1 What country is that? And honestly the Swedish issues aren't really that serious. The Greens needed to make a show of not supporting letting a budget influenced by the Sweden Democrats govern the country. It's nothing new really. Those two parties are not on friendly terms... I'm fairly sure that the Greens will support the same prime minister that where originally elected after a bit of posturing and horse trading in the parliament. And most of the time a proportional multi-party system, works quite well. Better then say the US first past the post system. As there's usually some majority of some kind that can be found, since different parties and representatives have different stances on different issues. And each political party usually has its own party whip in such system, instead of there just being two parties with two whips, so since parties have different stances on issues you'll have different majorities depending on the issues at hand, and negotiations before a goverment is formed that tends to ensure that some kind of majority can be formed for a lot of the laws being presented.
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