Politisches Parteiensystem nach Ländern

    Von AdIcy4323

    40 Kommentare

    1. can someone explain how the political system of Iran works? do their political party have different views and hold elections?

      I am 100% ignorant on this. I always thought it is like a one party state like China

    2. anotheruser55 on

      Just a couple of decades ago the world was covered with two party systems even in long consolidated democracies. I could have not guessed that now there just a couple of countries.

    3. plsdontattackmeok on

      Technically Malaysia is two party, is just component party too many

    4. creeper321448 on

      When over 90% of the seats in the House of Commons are either the Conservative or Liberal parties, Canada is not a „multi-party“ country.

    5. Meanteenbirder on

      I think another category is for two-candidate runoffs like in Poland and Brazil

    6. dumpsterfire_yt on

      Greenland literally has 5 parties, 4 of them having around 20% of the parliament, the coalition pay be made up of 90% of the seats but it still counts as multi-party.

    7. The U.S. doesn’t *have* two be a two party system but the elites benefit from a two party system so that’s what we get by default.

    8. Blue is generous for Turkey. It has effectively been a dominant-party system since 2002, and at best Turkey is a two-party country posing as a multi-party democracy. Alliances are constantly shifting, but there is usually a left-wing party (CHP) with roughly a quarter of the vote that tries to align with smaller parties to challenge the right-wing bloc. The right wing, by contrast, consistently consolidates the religious and nationalist vote.

      The main left-wing party has existed since the founding of the Republic. While the CHP has remained a major political force in Turkey, it has not held the top executive office for a sustained, uninterrupted period since 1950. Its participation in government has been only thanks to coalition arrangements since then.

    9. Calling Australia a Multi-Party system is a little much. For most of modern Australian history it’s been one party and one coalition (which split up last year, nobody knows how the next election will go) with some very minor parties/independents that only get a few seats and are almost never involved in forming government.

    10. Due-Rent-965 on

      I guess PRC and DPRK have multiple parties, but the communist party is dominant and has the final say. So, technically, dominant party.

    11. kinky-proton on

      Western sahara is two kinds of wrong.

      1 its part of Morocco so multi party.

      2 even if you want to go the other way it’d be a one party state where the president of SARD is by definition the chairman of the polisario front

    12. LongjumpingElk4099 on

      Despite Canada being multi-party only two parties have ever been in control

    13. weirdwallace75 on

      In those „multi-party“ countries, how many coalitions are there?

      Because if parties can only win with a few of their friends, and there’s only two groups of friends, you’re back to a two-party system in all but name.

    14. If „dominant“ refers to the relationship between the party and the state, then it should include South Africa just as much as Hungary, Serbia, and Paraguay.

      If it refers to the results of elections, then South Africa and Japan.

      No idea where Greenland comes from, not true under any definition.

    15. Hispanoamericano2000 on

      Somewhat odd that the label „Hybrid Regime“ is absent from this type of map.

    16. South_Telephone_1688 on

      Many of these „multi-party“ are basically One Party, maybe Two Party at best. Some examples include Canada (Lib vs Con), South Korea (same 2 parties that keep changing names), and Japan (LDP).

      If you’re only looking at technicalities, then China and a bunch of others are also a multi-party countries.

    17. South Korea is only a multi party system on paper. It is in fact a 2-party country.

    18. User-9640-2 on

      >Pakistan – Multi party

      ![gif](giphy|GfgW6K3PjKvtnc16IK)

      It’s a Military dictatorship, masquerading as Multi party system lol

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