this post was submitted on 07 Jul 2024
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[–] Corngood@lemmy.ml 13 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) (1 children)

The right was never dominating the polls. They had ~30%. It was always going to play out this way. The doom and gloom was that actual fascists had 30% of the vote.

It was only individual candidates being encouraged to drop out strategically.

France has a slightly less shitty electoral system than e.g. UK, US, Canada, so a party with 30% was never going to win absolute power.

Edit: when I say "it was always going to play out this way" l just mean the right weren't going to win a majority. The left still seems to have done surprisingly well in the second round.

Also, it's still shitty that the fascists won so many seats..

[–] PugJesus@lemmy.world 13 points 4 months ago (1 children)

France has a slightly less shitty electoral system than e.g. UK, US, Canada, so a party with 30% was never going to win absolute power.

They were projected with 240-310 seats (out of 577) before the Centrists and Left agreed to cooperate. If things were a little more dysfunctional, it could very well have ended up very ugly.

[–] Uruanna@lemmy.world 3 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

1st round projections aren't the same as winning projections. Those 240+ seats projections were illustrating the actual results of round 1, where the far right was ahead in a lot of places, not from guessing how round 2 would end, because... we don't do it that way, I guess? But since round 2 only brings the candidates who scored above 20%, which usually means either 2 or 3, rarely 4 candidates, instead of 10+, that means everyone who voted on round 1 for the parties that lost would then vote for one of the remaining 2~3 candidates. And that's anybody's guess.

So you can have 30% of voters bringing the far right to the top among 10 candidates, but those 30% don't win when there's only 2 or 3 candidates left, because it turns out 70 always beats 30 - especially with the mutual agreement that a 3rd place center or left candidate would drop out in favor of the other to stop the far right. This doesn't work in rural places where the far right was over 40% (some "centrists" still chose the far right over the left alliance, getting over 60%), but it works everywhere else - and that's what happened here. Think of 2 round voting with >10 parties as a little bit more like one round ranked choice voting than first past the post with 3 candidates.

Realistically, we knew that the results of the first round was never going to hold, because it's been like that for a few decades - like someone else said, 2002 saw the far right fail to get more on the presidential round 2 than the 20% of their score of round 1 (but that ceiling has been rising since because of Macron); of course there's the concern of the growing number of regions that feel abandoned and turn to the far right, but beyond that, the real question was how well the left alliance would do, and how badly the "center" would drop. That's the big deal, the left is back on top - now we just hope that union is strong enough and they don't collapse again because of the constant demonizing that Macron and the media have been spewing non-stop (they really no joke honestly want the far right over the boogeyman "extreme left" that doesn't exist), with the center left abandoning ship to side with Macron again.