Regarding protest voting:
This might work for a while, but it’s quite dangerous, and can very well get out of hand.
It seems though the version of democracy that the opposition proposes is built on patches, and somehow manages to work.
We know from history that democracy is an unstable governing, but it’s the least worse, has it enables the citizens maximum freedom in a sea of ideas.
While protest voting can work when the situation isn’t too bad, one has to wonder what will happen if the situation in society will enable those “fringe parties” to gain a substantial chunk of the electoral votes.
If the economy will go down, too many immigrants will not assimilate, and Al-Qaeda terrorism will hit on British soil, we might see the popularity of the BNP actually rising.
There could be other mechanisms for large, moderate parties, to check why their voters are unpleased of them. Protest voting, although common, is criticized by many, just like putting a blank page into the voting box.
Just because many people do something, doesn’t mean it’s the smart thing to do.
I can give many examples, where protest voting actually helped extremist parties gain considerable share, and there was a real danger of democracy falling apart.
One such example is the French elections where La Pen gained so much power because people, who wanted to protest by not voting, simply didn’t go to vote.
Lucky for all, the French realized what they’ve done, and by the second round, almost all electoral age French people voted.
Another example is the rise of Heider in Austria a couple of years ago – because the Austrians protested against the mainstream parties, and simply didn’t go to vote, Heider’s party gain huge electoral share.
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And who decides what party is to extreme, the government? This leaves to much power in the hands of those ruling and its own views on what it extreme over not.
Certainly not!
For that we have courts, which in functional democracies are separated from the government.
The court should rule out if those parties violate the law, by encourage violence and hatred towards specific group, whether minority or majority, in the country.
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Its must be remembered that only a hundred years ago, the centre-left views of many modern parties would have been considered extreme. Even more so, Trade Unions were banned in certain nations, such as the UK in the 1870s as they were believed to be too extreme. Despite this many of us take for granted the the 8-hour day, minimum wage, workplace sanitation such as toilets, breaks during work, paid holidays, job security, compensation for work related injuries, the banning of working with dangerous substances such as Asbestos etc which these trade Unions fought tooth and nail for against governments which viewed these demands as unreasonable, revolutionary, extremist and dangerous. The fact is, what some see as Extremist, can in a few generations time be viewed as modern centre politics, but only because they managed to voice their opinions.
This is quite an absurd statement, if you don’t mind me saying this.
In those days non-white and women couldn’t vote too, so I don’t think one can really take those days as a relevant example for our times.
I’m talking about parties which are
fascist or Marxists, which want to abolish democracy, and encourage hatred towards specific groups in the population.
Not parties which put in danger the aristocracy and give more right to the citizens.
Do you imply that in a hundred years such parties won’t be considered extremist?
And even if we do use your example of the 19th century, then one should say that even back than, Marxists and fascists were considered extremists, and are still are to these days.
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Furthermore, it must be remembered that Hitler gained power through the enabling act because he used the argument that other parties such as the Communists were dangerous and couldn’t be allowed to gain power, and the country was under threat from their supporters.
Exactly!
If the communists and the national socialists were banned, then they both couldn’t gain the electoral power they’ve gained.
This such proves my claims.
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Not true, the currently existing Democracies are a varying level of evolution, at the moment Russia’s Democratic system seems to under threat from “extreme amounts of strain on the political system and the populous", however one would hardly look at its decade long life span, its human rights records, and political culture and call it a ‘modern Democracy’. In fact all the post-Soviet bloc’s democracy’s are not the best to look at for ‘modern Democracy’ due to their un-democratic history. These are evolving Democracies, not modern ones.
So were the 19th century democracies which you took example from regarding their labeling of what parties are extreme and what aren’t.
Even so, the democracies of the 19th century, such as France and Italy, were democracies, and the social-democratic party was quite popular in those countries, so I think they could be used as an example of long standing democracies that were destroyed because extremists got to spread their poison.
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The reference to the current events in Germany only provide evidence to support my statement, rather than the oppositions.
Both these Germany states, Saxony and Brendanburg, were part of EAST Germany. They have suffered under 50 years Authoritarianism and poverty. As such its population have the least experience with Democracy. Furthermore the wages in the former Eastern bloc tend to be lower, and unemployment higher than that of the Developed West. So much so, that some extremists in West Germany have called for the East to be made a separate country again because it is seen as a developing nation draining a Western one’s resources. This example does more to defend the case against the banning of Extremist parties as this problem has more to deal with the economic problems of the areas and their inexperience with Democracy than a realistic threat of a Developed Democracy from fascism.
Although the support gained by the Neo-Nazis is to large to simply be considered a protest-vote, it does however shine the spotlight on a cultural, social and economic issue that Germany is failing to tackle which is leading to Authoritarianism rather than Democracy falling to extremism.
The federal government in Germany is quite long standing, and so Eastern Germany can’t be equated to all the other ex-soviet democracies. It was annexed to a decades-long democratic system, and it happened 15 years ago, which is quite enough for a well-funded and founded democracy to teach democracy to the population.
Also, the thesis you propose, that the eastern part is less democratic, doesn’t stand in other examples of similar situation.
For example, most of the immigrants to Israel came from non-democratic countries. Many of Israel’s prime ministers were born in non-democratic countries (like eastern Europe).
Yet Israel remained a democracy, and the immigrants didn’t and do not vote mainly for non-democratic or extremist parties (one of the reasons for this is that anti-democratic parties are banned in Israel).
For example, during the 1990s, 1 million Russians and Russian Jews immigrated to Israel from ex-Soviet territories.
Yet they voted for the mainstream, democratic parties.
Only the poor ones vote for extreme parties.
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Far better for German government to tackle the issue in its poverty ridden areas, than ban extremist parties and pretend the issue doesn’t exist, which does not solve the problem, only makes it continue to fester and grow outside the political spotlight. This later issue shall be tackled in the 4th post.
These two do not contradict each other – they German government should tackle the issue, but it should also prevent extremist parties from gain any power.
Extremists shouldn’t be the solution for any country’s problem.