by Suff » 02 Dec 2012, 19:05
I'm sure there was no natural alliance in many of the countries. Look at Sweden with a grand coalition of 5 or more parties and the Sweden Democrats in position to be kingmaker as there are so many parties (up to 10), who have significant proportions of the vote.
Look at Greece with right, centre and left in a grand coalition to try and save the Euro. Most countries have non aligned coalitions which fall apart at regular intervals as you would expect a non aligned body to do when faced with hard decisions which impact hard held ideology.
The Lib Dems are the easy target for a coalition as they have very few hard held convictions and a lot of "wishful thinking".
I guess the good thing about the UK is that we are so used to single parties that we learn, or are told, how to use PR to gain a single result. Something I despaired for quite a while. I was sure we'd wind up with coalitions forever. I was forgetting that the UK voters can get heartily sick of the kind of pandering that goes on when two or more parties unite and wind up doing everything the people don't want. Witness Scotland. It took three elections but the Scots got the hang of it pretty quickly. Although it was a huge outpouring of "hate" against the last Labour government and a complete rejection of the Labour policies in Scotland. Scots probably want ID cards even less than the English do. I wonder how many people have already forgotten that one????
There are 10 types of people in the world:
Those who understand Binary and those who do not.