Elections in various countries

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Richard W
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Re: Elections in various countries

Post by Richard W »

zompist wrote: Sat Oct 04, 2025 3:53 pm The EU and NATO absorbed not only most of the former Soviet satellites, but actual former Soviet republics. A future historian is probably going to comment that this was a bold move, and that it's astonishing that it was done without violence. Again, there is a constellation of factors which allowed it, but a part of it is surely that the EU existed as a now economic/political bloc that could take them in.
This expansion has been checked by strong shows of Russian opposition, ranging from comparatively minor occupations in Georgia and Moldova to full-scale war in the Ukraine.

Or are you suggested that credit is deserved for keeping Poland's borders stable? (Within the EU, there are potential disputes with Lithuania, Germany and the Czech Republic.)
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Re: Elections in various countries

Post by zompist »

Richard W wrote: Sun Oct 05, 2025 6:16 am
zompist wrote: Sat Oct 04, 2025 3:53 pm The EU and NATO absorbed not only most of the former Soviet satellites, but actual former Soviet republics. A future historian is probably going to comment that this was a bold move, and that it's astonishing that it was done without violence. Again, there is a constellation of factors which allowed it, but a part of it is surely that the EU existed as a now economic/political bloc that could take them in.
This expansion has been checked by strong shows of Russian opposition, ranging from comparatively minor occupations in Georgia and Moldova to full-scale war in the Ukraine.
Russia is a big country willing to support incursions and use dirty tricks. You can certainly make a case that the Russians were not effectively opposed, therefore misjudged that an invasion of Ukraine would be easy and unpunished. But those incursions date back to the early 1990s. What do you think would have been required to stop them?
Or are you suggested that credit is deserved for keeping Poland's borders stable?
Of course; that's something no international system was able to do for the previous 200 years.
Ares Land
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Re: Elections in various countries

Post by Ares Land »

Lecornu, the new French prime minister, just resigned.

I think he was named about a month ago? Anyway, he kept very quiet for a few weeks, finally named a new government, mostly identical to the previous one, and resigned.
The new government lasted I think 14 hours, which is some sort of record.

I'm happy we don't have one of those silly and unstable parliamentary systems! :D
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Raphael
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Re: Elections in various countries

Post by Raphael »

zompist wrote: Sat Oct 04, 2025 3:53 pm
Of course I haven't read that preface, so I'm not defending their analysis. I think you're not giving the EU+NATO enough credit though. (I don't know if they're talking about both at once, but I think we have to.
They don't mention NATO at all. I might have reacted less strongly if they had.
Until Trump, Europe was both covered by a powerful security umbrella, and felt it didn't need one of its own.

Europe had to deal with two major threats: revanchism from Germany, and invasion from the USSR. If your feeling is "well of course Germany wasn't going to go Nazi again", I'd say you're taking a lot of difficult and contingent events for granted. The idea that Germany losing a war would only create grievances for the next one was hardly far-fetched; it was what happened between WWI and WWII. A lot of things had to go right to eliminate that possibility: American aid, an alliance vs. the USSR, credible denazification, a credible commitment to democracy on the part of Germany. The conventional wisdom is that early economic integration (e.g. the European Coal and Steel Community) was an important part of this constellation of events, though certainly not the whole of it.

As for invasion, the key period is not the end of WWII but the end of the Cold War. The EU and NATO absorbed not only most of the former Soviet satellites, but actual former Soviet republics. A future historian is probably going to comment that this was a bold move, and that it's astonishing that it was done without violence. Again, there is a constellation of factors which allowed it, but a part of it is surely that the EU existed as a now economic/political bloc that could take them in.
Well, I think that NATO had more to do with all of that than the EU. As people sometimes say, the initial purpose of it was to "keep the Russians out, keep the Americans in, and keep the Germans down". I think a lot of the praise for the EU might be coming from people who like to think of themselves as the kind of people who think a lot of well-meaning thoughts about peace and friendship and anti-militarism, and who, therefore, really don't like the idea that one specific military alliance might actually have been good for peace. So they give the EU credit for things that are really NATO's achievement.
Minor conflicts aren't as dramatic, but e.g. the end of the Irish "troubles" is in part due to the fact that Ireland and the UK were now in the same supernational bloc.
Fair enough.

I do think without the nuclear factor, the First Cold War would have been a lot more likely to turn hot.
And as for people getting "used to living together peacefully"... you know more history than that. By 1914, Europe had been quite stable for a couple generations, and without a world war for a century. Economies were highly interconnected. Yet it started a World War anyway. Modern times offers plenty of other examples of conflicts starting up after decades of peace.
I'd say, there, the continued existence of NATO plays a role, too.
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Re: Elections in various countries

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Ares Land wrote: Mon Oct 06, 2025 7:02 am Lecornu, the new French prime minister, just resigned.

I think he was named about a month ago? Anyway, he kept very quiet for a few weeks, finally named a new government, mostly identical to the previous one, and resigned.
The new government lasted I think 14 hours, which is some sort of record.

I'm happy we don't have one of those silly and unstable parliamentary systems! :D
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Ares Land
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Re: Elections in various countries

Post by Ares Land »

bradrn wrote: Mon Oct 06, 2025 7:14 am
Ares Land wrote: Mon Oct 06, 2025 7:02 am Lecornu, the new French prime minister, just resigned.

I think he was named about a month ago? Anyway, he kept very quiet for a few weeks, finally named a new government, mostly identical to the previous one, and resigned.
The new government lasted I think 14 hours, which is some sort of record.

I'm happy we don't have one of those silly and unstable parliamentary systems! :D
I can’t resist quoting this comment from Le Parisien: « On a inventé l’autocensure »…
Not bad!
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Re: Elections in various countries

Post by MacAnDàil »

Raphael wrote: Sat Oct 04, 2025 11:43 am At first I thought about posting this in the "What are you reading..." thread, but it might lead to a political discussion, so I put it here instead.

I'm currently thinking about starting to read Why Nations Fail: The Origins of Power, Prosperity, and Poverty by Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson, which zompist reviewed a bit over a month ago: https://zompist.wordpress.com/2025/08/2 ... ions-fail/

While preparing to buy the book, I saw that it's been translated into German, as Warum Nationen scheitern. I usually don't read German translations of English books, but out of curiosity, I looked a bit at the free sample for the translation on my online store's website. Turns out the authors wrote an additional preface specifically for the German translation.

And in that preface they talk about the political situation in Europe. They talk about how much the European Union is in danger, and how important it is to preserve the European Union because of the peace and prosperity it has brought to (large parts of) Europe.

Sigh. Whenever I hear or see that particular talking point in favor of the EU, I have to exercise a lot of self-control to keep myself from starting to sympathize with the likes of Nigel Farage. It seems clear to me that the main reason why large parts of Europe have been fairly peaceful and stable after 1945 is that, during the First Cold War, within each of the two main blocs, war wasn't possible because everyone was militarily allied with everyone else, and between the two main blocs, war wasn't possible because it would have meant the end of the world. And once the First Cold War was over, people had simply gotten used to living together peacefully.

That idea explains the long period of relative peace and stability in Europe a lot better than the idea that an organization whose standard response to people doing things it doesn't want them to do is to write sternly worded letters has somehow prevented warmongers from waging war.

And yes, the fact that Acemoglu and Robinson believe what they believe on that matter makes it more difficult for me to take them seriously as scholars.
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Re: Elections in various countries

Post by Lērisama »

Ares Land wrote: Mon Oct 06, 2025 7:02 am Lecornu, the new French prime minister, just resigned.

I think he was named about a month ago? Anyway, he kept very quiet for a few weeks, finally named a new government, mostly identical to the previous one, and resigned.
The new government lasted I think 14 hours, which is some sort of record.

I'm happy we don't have one of those silly and unstable parliamentary systems! :D
Is there anyone left in non-far-right parties who even wants the job at this point?
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Re: Elections in various countries

Post by Ares Land »

Raphael wrote: Sat Oct 04, 2025 11:43 am
Sigh. Whenever I hear or see that particular talking point in favor of the EU, I have to exercise a lot of self-control to keep myself from starting to sympathize with the likes of Nigel Farage. It seems clear to me that the main reason why large parts of Europe have been fairly peaceful and stable after 1945 is that, during the First Cold War, within each of the two main blocs, war wasn't possible because everyone was militarily allied with everyone else, and between the two main blocs, war wasn't possible because it would have meant the end of the world. And once the First Cold War was over, people had simply gotten used to living together peacefully.
I don't really agree with you on that point -- but I see zompist answered with basically the same points I would have made :)

One additional thing, though! I see that Why Nations Fail was written in 2012 when everyone was predicting the end of the EU soon and "sovereignists" were on the rise everywhere.

I'd say the EU looks a lot more solid now, except for Brexit -- or maybe because of it? Even the far right kind of made its peace with it, judging from Meloni. Marine Le Pen doesn't even broach the subject anymore.
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Re: Elections in various countries

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Lērisama wrote: Mon Oct 06, 2025 10:19 am
Ares Land wrote: Mon Oct 06, 2025 7:02 am Lecornu, the new French prime minister, just resigned.

I think he was named about a month ago? Anyway, he kept very quiet for a few weeks, finally named a new government, mostly identical to the previous one, and resigned.
The new government lasted I think 14 hours, which is some sort of record.

I'm happy we don't have one of those silly and unstable parliamentary systems! :D
Is there anyone left in non-far-right parties who even wants the job at this point?
It would take an enormous ego and very little sense to even want the job. That description fits most of our political figures, so I think there are probably still volunteers.
No one who'd want the job would be smart enough to make some sort of coalition work, though, so I guess we're stuck for a while.
The logical next step would be to call for new elections, but who knows? Macron loves being unpredictable; it's one of the few joys the poor man has left.
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Re: Elections in various countries

Post by Raphael »

MacAnDàil: Do you really think that Europe would have made it through the time from 1948 to 1989 without a major war in a nuclear-free world?

Ares Land wrote: Mon Oct 06, 2025 10:29 am
I'd say the EU looks a lot more solid now, except for Brexit -- or maybe because of it? Even the far right kind of made its peace with it, judging from Meloni. Marine Le Pen doesn't even broach the subject anymore.
Viktor Orbán seems to be explicitly calling for the right-wing to take over the EU.
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Re: Elections in various countries

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More French drama: Lecornu is back as a negotiator, to try and form a government, with a deadline tomorrow. Multiple calls for new elections and/or Macron's resignation. It's getting hard to keep up!
Raphael wrote: Mon Oct 06, 2025 11:42 am Viktor Orbán seems to be explicitly calling for the right-wing to take over the EU.
It seems to be what most of the far-right hopes for, more or less explicitly.
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Re: Elections in various countries

Post by MacAnDàil »

Raphael wrote: Mon Oct 06, 2025 11:42 am MacAnDàil: Do you really think that Europe would have made it through the time from 1948 to 1989 without a major war in a nuclear-free world?
Yes, it made it from 1878 to 1912 without major wars. Between wanting to avoid the horrors of the Second World War, democracy, high literacy, pre-EU agreements and the UN, there were many factors in favour of peace in the late 20th century.
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Re: Elections in various countries

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MacAnDàil wrote: Thu Oct 09, 2025 8:44 am
Raphael wrote: Mon Oct 06, 2025 11:42 am MacAnDàil: Do you really think that Europe would have made it through the time from 1948 to 1989 without a major war in a nuclear-free world?
Yes, it made it from 1878 to 1912 without major wars. Between wanting to avoid the horrors of the Second World War, democracy, high literacy, pre-EU agreements and the UN, there were many factors in favour of peace in the late 20th century.
Neither side really wanted war in the Cold War; both were sure they could outcompete the other one on the economic turf, eventually driving the people of the losing side to overthrow their leaders and adopt the political and economic system of the winning side. As we know, the West won just that way. It wouldn't have been much different without nukes, I guess.
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bradrn
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Re: Elections in various countries

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Apparently Lecornu’s back as PM. Could anyone explain to me how this is not obviously insane?
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Ares Land
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Re: Elections in various countries

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bradrn wrote: Fri Oct 10, 2025 5:07 pm Apparently Lecornu’s back as PM. Could anyone explain to me how this is not obviously insane?
I'm afraid not. It is obviously insane.
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Re: Elections in various countries

Post by Ares Land »

After watching events unfold a bit this morning, Macron's reasoning seems a bit more clear.

I think the strategy is to stick to his guns and hope enough representatives are too afraid of new elections to risk a vote of no confidence.

Sad to say, this might just work. Several political figures were calling for new elections last week seem willing to offer some cooperation.

Still crazy and undemocratic, though..Ah well.
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Re: Elections in various countries

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Shouldn't all democratic parties cooperate when democracy faces a major challenge from extremists and populists? I think that is what Macron attempts to achieve. I don't know whether Lecornu is the best choice for that, though; I know too little about French politics.
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Re: Elections in various countries

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Regarding the EU: Greeks say the EU's austerity measures have crippled its poorer members. Personally, I don't know enough details about EU politics.
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Re: Elections in various countries

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rotting bones wrote: Sat Oct 11, 2025 3:39 pm Regarding the EU: Greeks say the EU's austerity measures have crippled its poorer members. Personally, I don't know enough details about EU politics.
So far as I know, they're right. Elites, and Germans, are still unwilling to understand Keynesian economics— they love austerity, largely because other people feel the pain. Reading Adam Smith, you can find the same attitude 250 years ago: he had to make arguments that recessions are bad actually. After all, workers in good times tend to demand more money.

During the last set of crises Paul Krugman pointed out that the US avoids some of these problems because it's an actual country. If there's a recession, unemployment, Social Security, and other benefits go disproportionately to poor states; nobody thinks of this as "New York and California bailing out Louisiana and West Virginia". But the safety net is not federalized in the EU, so e.g. Germans don't want to subsidize Greece.
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