• Karyoplasma
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    912 hours ago

    I’ve thought about that recently.

    In Germany, the 2 historically biggest parties were SPD (used to be liberal-democrat) and CDU (conservative) and they often were the ones tugging it out while the smaller parties were filling in as coalition partners for one or the other.

    Over time, the SPD splintered into several semi-big offshoot parties (Linke, for example) while the CDU stayed as a whole. As a result, CDU is now commonly a favorite for getting most votes in an election.

    Is that consistent with politics across the globe? And if, why do liberal or center parties tend to split up more than conservatives?

    • @PrimeMinisterKeyes
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      5 hours ago

      Counterexample: The European Parliament. IMHO, it looks like 4 right-wing groups, 2 left-wing ones and 2 centrist ones. While the exact positioning could be argued over, the right wing is quite certainly more fragmented than the left is.

    • @kitnaht
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      2812 hours ago

      Because conservatives gravitate towards authority, and progressives are looking to break the status quo.

      So conservatives value order, authority, and it causes them to fall in line.

      Progressives are looking to break that order, believing that things can be better than they are right now. That causes them to infight more often.

    • @someguy3
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      9 hours ago

      I commonly hear the left is a loose coalition of factions (which can split apart), while the right fall in line. I think there are fewer factions on the right, or the factions are not as far apart, so coming together is easier. They also unite in absolute hatred of the left, so will fall in line to slay that beast.