d4m10n
Penultimate Amazing
Over in USA politics, I've seen a few posts saying basically that U.S. performance needs to be baselined against global trends, e.g. COVID-19, inflation, immigration, incumbent party vote share. This post is about whether there were any exceptions to the rule that incumbent parties fared badly this year, in the most developed nations which are globally interconnected by trade and treaty.
I've seen a few think pieces on this topic (e.g. Pew, AP, VoH) but decided to put together my own list anyhow.
My questions here are threefold: Why is this global trend happening? Are there any solid exceptions? Do the exceptions tell us something about the overall trend? I'd be especially interested in hearing from people outside of the US & UK, which are the only two nations I'm already relatively familiar with, politically speaking.
I've seen a few think pieces on this topic (e.g. Pew, AP, VoH) but decided to put together my own list anyhow.
- Austria — Incumbent ÖVP tanked by insurgent FPÖ.
- Belgium — Incumbent coalition government loses seats but holds on to power.
- Canada — No nationwide election; incumbent PM in trouble.
- Denmark — No general election for seats in the Folketing (previous election 2022).
- France — Incumbent alliance loses seats to both left-wing and right-wing opposition.
- Germany — No general election, 21st Bundestag will be chosen next year.
- Greece — No general election this year (previous election 2023).
- Iceland — Halla Tómasdóttir wins Icelandic presidential election, defeating former prime minister Katrín Jakobsdóttir; neither candidate was incumbent at the time.
- Ireland — Incumbent coalition parties Fianna Fáil & Fine Gael each lost vote share, but only marginally, and still managed to increase their seats in the Dáil Éireann. Greens essentially wiped out.
- Italy — Previous general election in 2022; only regional elections in 2024. Slight anti-incumbent results from the latter.
- Luxembourg — Previous general election held last year.
- Netherlands — Incumbent Rutte succeeded by Schoof as PM.
- Norway — Parliamentary election to be held next year.
- Portugal — Center-right minority government ousts long term incumbent Socialist Party.
- Spain — Previous general election held in 2023.
- Sweden — Previous general election held in 2022.
- Switzerland — Swiss politics are far too collegial for me to wrap my head around; SVP appears to be on the ascendent due to immigration policy backlash.
- Turkey — Incumbent party loses 15 provinces previously held.
- United Kingdom — Resounding loss for incumbent conservative party.
- United States — Incumbent center-left party loses only nationwide election.
My questions here are threefold: Why is this global trend happening? Are there any solid exceptions? Do the exceptions tell us something about the overall trend? I'd be especially interested in hearing from people outside of the US & UK, which are the only two nations I'm already relatively familiar with, politically speaking.
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