Ah yes, a headline by a British outlet. The other country with a 2-party political system.
They cannot fathom complexity in democracy.
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You should read up on the local council elections that took place, where who I assume you think is one of the two just fell into third place.
I was being a little facetious there, I admit.
Two party?
The fuck you on about
At least until now, the two main parties are massively advantaged. This might change, with Russian propaganda powered "Reform"but it so far it has been that way. Liberals have some seats but comically few relative to the votes they get.
Always funny how these things work.
"Democracy bad!" - "Can we get some government money now?"
Make that 36!
Factorial
Can't be. There's not enough people.
It was 46 last time
Le Battle Royale when?
Mom says they have to share
Also, if the mainstream does get its act together, next year's election looks likely to hand the keys of the Élysée to the fascists. Turns out they are pretty popular.
That's what my home country (Iran) did right with elections. They have a committee that has to approve the candidates, so you'd only get four to eight candidates each election. They of course also make sure to cover all of the political spectrum, from dark brown all the way to darker brown.
Who approves the committee? The French system is okay, they vote in two rounds, most candidates won't make it to the second round.
The committee consists of six religious clerks directly appointed by the supreme leader, and six law experts appointed by the head of judiciary, which I kid you not is appointed by the supreme leader. Not to worry though, the supreme leader himself is elected by a council elected by the people, but guess who has to approve the candidates for the council's election? That's right, the committee.
If I understood correctly, the brownies.
Well atleast all of them could become former prime minister in next few years. \s
Let's hope the guillotines had been well maintained, then
![Wikipedia screenshot: The Council is composed of Islamic clerics and lawyers.[31] The Iranian constitution calls for the council to be composed of six Islamic faqihs (experts in Islamic Law), "conscious of the present needs and the issues of the day" to be selected by the Supreme Leader of Iran, who may dismiss them at will,[32] and six jurists, "specializing in different areas of law, to be elected by the Majlis from among the Muslim jurists nominated by the Chief Justice"[33] (who, in turn, is also appointed by the Supreme Leader).[34][35] Membership is for phased six-year terms: half the membership changes every three years](https://feddit.org/pictrs/image/c0d6da92-d562-42fa-b69c-443736cab5bd.png)
![Wikipedia: The Assembly of Experts (Persian: مجلس خبرگان رهبری, romanized: Majles-e Khobregān-e Rahbarī, lit. 'Assembly of Experts for Leadership') is the deliberative body of Iran empowered to appoint, supervise, and discharge the Supreme Leader of Iran.[2][3] The assembly consists of 88 members who are directly elected by the public to serve eight-year terms, and all candidates must be vetted by the Guardian Council.](https://feddit.org/pictrs/image/9565ed4f-b463-40c0-92b3-517bf24c3579.png)