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Eric Platon
@ic
While many countries are on a slope to the right of the right, it seems British are hopeful contrarians. A landslide it is. Consequences of Brexit seem a big determinant. Yet Europe is changing, so what’s different in the UK ?
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Manator.eth πŸŽ©πŸ–πŸ’ŠπŸ“ pfp
Manator.eth πŸŽ©πŸ–πŸ’ŠπŸ“
@manator
The difference is UK had a conservative government over the last years while most of Europe was ruled by leftists. So people are just switching.
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Eric Platon
@ic
But then why not β€œswitching” to the far right, as many countries across the world see happen, including the neighbour France. β€œJust switching” sounds like there are only two choices, which looks the norm in the UK. In Europe, there is usually more pluralism.
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Manator.eth πŸŽ©πŸ–πŸ’ŠπŸ“ pfp
Manator.eth πŸŽ©πŸ–πŸ’ŠπŸ“
@manator
UK has only two parties that are serious contenders, so it wasn’t surpirising. For other EU countries: there are simply not many centric parties left, many of them have moved to the left spectrum while many conservative parties have been labeled β€žfar rightβ€œ.
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Eric Platon
@ic
Looking at France, Italy and Spain, perhaps Sweden too, the conservative parties seem to be labelled authoritarian (which differs from totalitarian, but slide to the right), while far right stays far right.
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Manator.eth πŸŽ©πŸ–πŸ’ŠπŸ“ pfp
Manator.eth πŸŽ©πŸ–πŸ’ŠπŸ“
@manator
If you look at what constitutes β€œfar right” these days there clearly has been a one sided relabeling. Positions former centric and conservative politicians have been supporting 20 years ago are now called far right or authoritarian while truly authoritarian policies such as chat controls etc which are envisioned by β€œliberal” or progressive parties are not labeled as such.
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Eric Platon
@ic
More and more right and centre borrow far-right rhetoric, blurring and confusing. On top of that officially far-right parties try to hide themselves under populist rhetoric, blurring and confusing some more. These two trends is what makes labeling difficultβ€”the slope to the right.
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Manator.eth πŸŽ©πŸ–πŸ’ŠπŸ“ pfp
Manator.eth πŸŽ©πŸ–πŸ’ŠπŸ“
@manator
That’s utter nonsense. The problem is not rhetoric but framing from biased NGOs and news outlets undermined by one-sided, mostly left extreme political activists.
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Eric Platon
@ic
Having watched France and the UK recently, rather closely, I can just report Macron has been using far-right terminology on many political aspects for a few years already (specific words), and Sunak has repeated he would be tough on immigration if re-elected, on top of several measures in the recent past. On the other hand, French far-right is softening its political stance by being vague on many issues faced by people, while remaining pretty clear on their core values. I don’t know about the UK far-right, though. But all in all, the people cited here are in fact confusing people with their word. Much less by their actions.
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