Comments by "Luredreier" (@Luredreier) on "DW News"
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@johnlenin830 Finland and Sweden isn't a primary target for Russia, but that doesn't mean that they can't be pulled into a conflict if Ukraine is attacked.
Both these nordic countries are aligned with the west and has had debates about joining NATO as a result of increased Russian agression.
Putin might consider the position of Kaliningrad under threat, and if that's the case he may start a conflict with these nordic countries in order to secure Kaliningrad.
Kaliningrad is also the key to take and hold the Baltic countries if that's desired.
In the case of a conflict with NATO any way to reduce the frontline would be desired.
Taking the Baltic countries and Finland would certainly shorten the border.
And there's certain Swedish territories that could also be used to enchance the defense of Russia in case of a war with the west.
I very much doubt that Russia would actually push all that far into Sweden as doing so just isn't worth it given that Russia will have other concerns in case of such a war.
But Finland and Sweden both have reasons to worry about Russias intentions.
Also, Russia might be hoping that NATO doesn't have the staying power to maintain a war long term with them and China, and that if they pull in the Chinese they might be able to divert American attention enough to make it possible to defeat the west in detail.
That is, while the west might have superior armies they can't be everywhere at once, and it's probably slightly easier for Russia and China to reinforce eachother then it is for the west to concentrate forces against either of them without leaving themselves vulnerable on the other side.
And with western forces split between two fronts it might be plausible for China and Russia to defeat us on one of the fronts.
I very much doubt they could win a long term war with us.
But if they can hold on long enough to sap our will to fight they could in theory gain ground in a negotiated peace.
Or at least that's what I think they're thinking.
Russia would love to get Finland and the Baltic countries and perhaps some of the Kuril islands.
China would love to get Taiwan and perhaps some other islands in the region.
And while I don't think either of them genuinly thinks that they can defeat the west in long lasting wars I imagine that they think it's possible to gain that territory.
There's no Americans living in either place.
And while the Finns and Estonians are European they don't have a indo-european language and are not a NATO member, so they might feel distant enough to voters in Washington, London, Paris, and Berlin to be something they're willing to give up in a negotiated peace.
Similar to how Crimea was.
For us here in the nordic region it won't feel that way though...
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If you think German elections are fragmented you've seen nothing yet.
Norway has 169 seats representing a population of about 5 million people, and we have 10 political parties represented in our parliament after this years election.
The smallest represented party had 0,2% of the total national vote supporting them, and is fighting for a hospital in a part of the country that has more representation relative to their population size then the rest of the country, similarly to how US states have political power not just based on population.
My own party has 3 seats, up from 1 last election with 3,9% of the votes, if we had 4% we would have had 7 seats, 3 from the individual electoral circles and 4 leveling seats on top of that.
The communists increased their number of seats from 1 to 8 in this years election and was one of the big winners of this election.
When you have multiple political parties you end up with multiple political axis, not just left-right.
If Germany had more political parties represented, like we do then there would have been more possible coalition options available and the parties could shop around more for a possible coalition.
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@frozello14 No, if you had one party of Nazies that's the biggest party in a country and no one wants to cooperate with them because they're Nazies and the majority of people voted for other parties, then those other parties working together in a coalition is the winners even if they're not the biggest.
Indeed sometimes the two biggest parties may not even be a member of the governing coalition because while they have the most votes as single parties you'll find that coalitions including them essentially has less votes then the other side.
Yes, gaining more seats is a victory, you get more influence.
But the real victory is to win votes in the parliament, including, but not limited to the vote for who should be prime minister.
For the prime minister role if the 3 biggest parties fails to come up with anything else that's better and you end up with the previous 5 party government plus some other party leading to a majority then yes, those previous five parties should continue to rule if they manage to get enough other parties supporting them.
It involves negotiations.
The benefit of being the biggest party is that you get to try first.
As for the exact election results I keep seeing articles about parties winning or losing seats, but not being Finnish I've yet to see a up to date overview of the seat distribution.
But my point is that any combination of parties that gets more seats, however they manage to get it is equally valid in terms of honouring the election results as any other combination, regardless of the size of the parties involved.
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@asanulsterman1025 Comparing that conflict between Belgium and the Netherlands with Northern Ireland isn't exactly painting your history creditential in the best light either.
Belgium separated from the Netherlands on religious grounds.
After the Frankish empire split up the areas between what's today France and what's today Germany where split up between their respective ancestral states and have been subject to many conflicts as a result of being a border area for so long.
Neither the Netherlands nor Belgium was unified after Lotharingia was split up between the two, just like the Holy Roman Empire was later it was a patchwork of different states till the Burgundians United them all under a single state, a duchy within the HRE (for as long as they lasted).
That's where the twos history originates.
The reason they split up as identities is that when the last Burgundian duke died the parts of his territory that was a part of the HRE came under Habsburg control (while the parts that wasn't was inherited by the French king).
Anyway the Habsburgs wheren't exactly known for religious tolerance, being Catholics they persecuted protestants, leading to the Netherlands revolting, while catholic Belgium, Luxembourg etc stayed loyal to the Habsburgs in the Spanish Netherlands.
In other words, the Flemish in Belgium where a part of Belgium because they where Catholics.
Belgium has been under the French, Spanish and Netherlands multiple times, and was a part of the United Kingdoms of the Netherlands and the Grand Dutchy of Luxemburg before the current state was formed, both nations created in the wake of the Napoleonic wars.
Then the Belgians rebelled in the 1830.
Forming todays Belgium in 1831...
Belgium is split from the Netherlands along mainly religious lines.
Belgium is divided internally mainly along linguistic lines...
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@Bln-f9u The German electoral system is unfair towards smaller political parties.
Is there any parties that campaign for a electoral reform?
Here in Norway the smallest party represented in our 169 seat parliament had 0,2% of the national vote.
All of our seats are proportional.
We have 19 regional electoral seats and 150 of our 169 seats are distributed among these 19 seats based on both population and land area.
There's no lower limit to how many votes you need to get one of these seats, hence a seat with just 0,2% of the votes.
The remaining 19 seats are given based on how many seats a party should have gotten at a national level, including the ones they got from the regions, but has a threshold of 4%
My own party MDG in Norway ended up with 3 seats because we got 3,9% of the votes, if we had 4% exactly we would have had 7 seats, 3 from individual electoral circles, and 4 leveling seats.
The communists (Rødt) got 8 seats, up from just 1 last election.
We have 10 political parties represented in our parliament despite having fewer seats in our parliament then Germany does and despite having a far smaller population.
3 left wing, 4 centrist and 2 right wing parties + a new party that I'm honestly not sure about (that 0,2% party).
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@JaIch9999 Perhaps the wrong conclusions where drawn?
The ideal is to maximize the number of real options that people have.
Back then you had few big parties because the electorate was too fractured among many tiny parties.
Now there's few big parties because the electoral system unfairly favors the biggest ones.
In both cases you end up with the same exact issue, too few real options.
Back then people had no idea about what exact small party to vote for to have a real shot at making any change if they didn't favor one of the big parties.
And there was no incentive towards merging parties or strategically voting for a party that's not a exact fit with your own beliefs if non of the big parties where appealing, otherwise all the incentive ended up being towards the big ones that had a real shot at power.
Now you're locking people into few big parties again but with different mechanisms.
The country I live in, Norway also have incentives towards merging parties like Germany does.
But it's still proportional at every level.
And there's no lower limit to how many voters a party needs to get represented.
The way that's achieved is that instead of the German single representative first past the post electoral circles we have 19 proportional electoral circles, 150 of our 169 seats are distributed among these circles, then people are appointed to them proportionally based on the popularity of the various party lists, people can be in more then one list, and lists can be modified, reordering people.
But there are limitations on both of these things.
The remaining 19 seats are then distributed at a national level in the same way that the German proportional seats are distributed, after accounting for the first past the post seats.
There's no lower limit for the number of votes needed to get a seat in the individual electoral circle.
But to qualify for the remaining 19 seats elected at a national level your party needs at least 4% of the national vote.
So the difference between 3,9% of the vote and 4% of the vote can be 2-3 seats for the lower percentage and 7-8 seats for the higher percentage.
So two parties with 1% or 2% of the vote has a incentive to merge if their values are similar enough, but they don't have to in order to get represented in our parliament.
In this last election a party made it into our parliament with just 0,2% of the national votes from the electoral circle with the most seats pr voter in the country, on a platform of fighting for a local hospital.
So we get that local representation just like Germany does with the first past the post system.
Yet, every single representative in our parliament was voted in proportionally and the seat allocation within the electoral circles was as close to the real proportions as possible, not favoring the bigger parties at all.
Those 19 seats only corrects the difference between the individual electoral circles and the national vote, so that's also 100% proportional.
So our only arguably non-proportional rule is that 4% rule, but it actually serves to empower our smaller parties, motivating people to vote for them.
And the bigger parties to work with them.
As a result we have 10 political parties in our parliament this election (that 0,2% party got representation at a national level for the first time ever this year).
Our electoral system isn't perfect.
But it encourages cooperation.
It gives each political party more room for maneuvering with regards to each other, more so then in the German system where the parties are essentially both locked into having to cooperate with parties that does not share their values when running the country.
Our system does encourage the formation of minority governments.
I actually consider that a strength, since it leads to a more dynamic legislative branch where the opinions of the voters are more closely reflected in the laws since parties will cooperate on a case by case basis when forming laws all the time, meaning that it's the majority for the individual proposed law that matters rather then what combinations of of parties makes up a majority at a single point.
Yes, it does mean that we often change cabinets a bit more then once pr election.
But I don't think of that as a weakness.
We don't do snap elections.
If a cabinet falls it can only do so if another alternative is ready to be presented.
As for predictability, you know the election result in terms of relative power of the parties, and you can make predictions based on that, just like the various flags discussed in this latest German election.
There's always certain combinations that's likely or required in order to make a change between elections.
And with the proportionality you can also predict the outcome better using polls prior to the election too giving companies and society at large a better idea about what to prepare for either way.
The biggest drawback however is likely that it's hard to predict what exact representatives ends up with those 19 leveling seats.
Both what parties ends up qualifying for the 4% threshold and what representative on the 19 different party lists that ends up with those seats when they qualify.
The math is complicated.
And while a party can ensure that certain seats goes to certain important party members in electoral circles where they know they're going to get at least x number of seats by placing their most important representatives first in the list in those electoral circles.
They still have no way of knowing what electoral circle they end up getting a leveling seat from, if they get one.
So people that's not first on the lists are dealing with a lot of unpredictability.
And so are voters who care about individual person rather then the party.
Our system is extremely focused on political parties at the cost of having little power of what exact individuals ends up in control.
You can gather signatures and present a new list with representatives you want elected (possibly also members in other parties, if you can get their consent), and if your list gets enough votes you may get them represented that way.
But that requires the list you presented to get enough voters itself to get at least one representative on its own, on part with a real political party (what happened with that 0,2% party).
Or you can vote for a party and reorder the representatives in favor of your preferred candidate, but the change isn't even going to be counted unless a significant percentage of the voters for that party has made a change too.
Not necessarily the same change, just a change.
But still.
In either case you need a significant amount of support in order to get people into the parliament who are not at the top of the party lists for a party that's able to get representation, and unless that party can reliably get representation you can't really make predictions about who exactly ends up in the parliament.
Also, even if you're on a list and don't get elected, you could suddenly end up in parliament just because someone died, got sick or took parental leave.
And yes, perhaps our system does favor the smaller parties a little too much in the relative power play at times.
My own party had 3,9% of the votes this election, going up from 1 to 3 representatives, if we had just a few hundred more votes we'd probably have 7 seats.
Out of a total of 169 seats.
With that 4% rule the winner of an election can end up being decided by just a few hundred votes like that, since those small parties often end up with the balance of power.
So if one party has 3,9% and another has 4% that might lead to a significantly different outcome then if those two parties switched places.
This election was one of those elections where what parties would get more then 4% became extremely exciting, with a whopping 4 parties close to that line.
My own included.
My own party didn't make it this time.
But that's okey.
We still increased our representation, and we'll make it next time.
Since the system is proportional at every level we don't feel unfairly underrepresented.
Our core areas requires more voters pr seat then that 0,2% party, but that's okey, there's a reason why this country decided to distribute the seats between the electoral circles the way it did.
(It's all about ensuring that every region is well represented, regardless of total population, and to ensure that high population density areas don't dominate too much, after all, if you have two places, one with 10 x the population of the other all living in the same city, the people in that 10x population area probably have similar experiences with regard to that area so having 1 or 10 people from there won't make much difference in ensuring that the 10x place gets its concerns heard, but the 1x place have fewer people, and people in that 1x area might not interact with the 10x area often enough for the ones in the 10x area to ever really know and understand what concerns the people in the 1x area has, so their representation is more important, even if it comes at the cost of the relative power of the 10x area, so we grant representation based on both population and land area, so a big land area with few people will still get a decent amount of representation, in this election enough to give a party representing them a seat in our parliament despite only having 0,2% of the total national votes supporting them)
Democracy are not about getting the best people in charge.
Or to rule by a majority.
It's about ensuring that everyone feels that they have a influence on their everyday life.
And to find a consensus that everyone can live with.
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@PHlophe If there's a quota then companies will be funding more students and measures encouraging females to join said studies and so one and so forth.
This stuff has worked just fine here in the nordic countries.
And it's not like they're requiring half of them to be female or one third, just *one*.
And this is in a country where you are already required by law to have reprentatives from the workers in the board.
So adding a woman is hardly that much of a stretch.
Part of the point is actually to get more than one point of view representated there.
The best individual for a task might not be the best team member for a task.
Just look at football players doing it all solo leading to the team losing vs teams where every player individually is inferior to every member of the opposite team but where the team as a whole is superior.
Any team where even a tiny bit of creativity is required benefits from getting more perspectives, be that from someone from a different place (say both a republican and a democrat in the US as well as people preferring third parties, men, women, natives, immigrants, people from rural areas and urban areas, cities and the countryside etc. It just means that you don't get stuck in a situation where no one has an idea that isn't different from everyone else because everyone got the same background, and because people are also different they're also more on their toes when communicating, being more careful and quite frankly better team players)
Exposure to different ideas has been proven to on average increase productivity and innovation in pretty much every single contexts where it's been tried out.
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@GTA5Player1 Quite the country.
Any time someone does not feel represented by the political system they start looking for alternative paths towards relevance.
And I'm sure that Germany has experienced enough terrorism in the seventies to know that disgruntled citizens can be quite problematic...
The fall of the Soviet Union might have helped, but the presence of Die Linke in your parliament is probably just as important in avoiding a modern "Rote Armee Fraktion" as the political changes further east.
If you allowed more smaller parties then perhaps some of your current parties could split up into their current factions giving people more real options instead of forcing everyone into a few big parties.
Germany is bigger than Norway, has way more seats in your parliament, and more diversity, yet you have less parties represented.
The best way you can possibly reduce your conflict levels is by ensuring that more people are represented and by splitting up the political identities into smaller ones that are easier to deal with.
Some of the values of AfD could perhaps be meet without turning to racism if they could be represented in another party.
There's certainly room for a party between communists and labour in a country.
Conservativism can take more than one form, CDU/CSU isn't the only possible answer for that.
The 3 direct seat exception to the 5% rule helps, but is still problematic in my view.
5% is just way, way too high, and the exception relies on a fundamentally unfair first past the post system.
I see what they tried to achieve with that system, and I agree with many of the fundamental ideas, but there's other ways to implement those ideas that avoids some of its pitfalls.
Like the focus on person over politics caused by a system where you are voting for people rather than parties.
You can ensure local representation without turning to the first past the post system.
The German system is only fair when it comes to the relationship between the bigger parties, not to the smaller ones the way I see it.
However it's your country, not mine.
I'm just glad that we don't have to deal with it.
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