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jaabe | 6 years ago
In our very recent election Liberal Alliance was decimated and Lars Seiers brothers party was voted in and is now bigger than Liberal Alliance.
Now, I’m not suggesting anything that you will need a tinfoil hat for. There are a lot of reasons things went the way they did for these two political parties, and most of them could have happened without the easy access to money. I do, however, think it’s a worrying show of how just much influence, a single billionaire can have in a small democracy, compared to the average citizen.
Svip|6 years ago
So maybe money does work? Or perhaps the LA's leadership is focusing on exactly the wrong reasons?
[0] https://politiken.dk/indland/politik/FV19/art7244111/Erhverv...
KozmoNau7|6 years ago
That tends to create a lot of internal friction, which became very obvious as the election results rolled in, and they all started backtalking each other and pointing fingers.
Maybe it's obvious, but LA is a political party I intensely disagree with. In my perspective, if they want to stand a chance in the next election, they need to do some serious restructuring, otherwise the internal friction will end them.
lotsofpulp|6 years ago
Many people I’ve met are completely apathetic of their voting powers. They don’t want to read current events, research candidates, go to town meetings, and work to inform fellow voters. On the other hand, many people are also burned out from going to work, getting kids ready, making dinner, putting them to bed, working 80 hours a week, etc. And they may not have the cognitive abilities to analyze data to figure out what is true and false.
Democracy relies on having numerous “informed” voters, but what happens when the machine gets so complicated that there are not sufficient “informed” voters?
baybal2|6 years ago
Democracy relies on level headed people doing politics.
nabla9|6 years ago
"Movement Now" is just starting. It was created by multimillionaire (net worth $300 Million) member of the parliament after he was denied promised position in the cabinet.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Movement_Now
Tade0|6 years ago
We had (in Poland) at least one party which suddenly sprung into existence with decent poll results, was very pro big business and had pretty shady financing.
Fortunately they(especially their leader) were incompetent.
What I'm trying to say is that to me your account is not surprising at all.
sneak|6 years ago
It seems to me to run counter to the democratic idea that an individual’s opinion matters. Either individuals are good at forming their own opinions from the world and voting is the practical realization of that into a government, or the electorate is an unthinking blob to be managed, as it will only vote for that for which it has been sufficiently inundated with propaganda, in which case the whole election is somewhat of a farce to begin with.
Why isn’t the will of the people (given an equal opportunity market for people to buy mass media advertising) respected more?
lumberjack|6 years ago
rayiner|6 years ago
Because some people don’t like the implications of what the public wants. Around the west you’re seeing a dramatic shift in people becoming more conservative in certain fronts, especially on the points of immigration and nationalism. The folks who dominate the kinds of sites that write about that stuff can’t abide by that. So they have strong incentives to denounce that all as the product of sheep-like voters being influenced by propaganda.
CaptainZapp|6 years ago
I would agree with you, if we wouldn't live in a day and age where facts are relative and truth is completely malleable.
KozmoNau7|6 years ago
They claim to somewhere between classical liberal and libertarian, but they are in fact by-the-book Ayn Rand objectivists. However that label has some negative connotations (for good reason), so officially they stick to the claims of classical liberalism, libertarianism and individual freedom above all.
It's a very interesting party, and as their recent collapse has shown, a party of very strong-willed individualists.
kodz4|6 years ago
baybal2|6 years ago
Want power? — cling to men with more power.
My advice, drop in onto their caucus and start talking something big. Dress smartly. Make an impression of you being a "big man."
Believe me, it works.
I was a complete nobody on a work visa in Canada, yet I crashed on nearly every caucus party Christy Clarke had over 6 years I was there, and was making sure to make big fuzz with my appearance every time.