Post by Michael KuettnerPost by Rich RostromPost by Michael Kuettner(a) There's also no _requirement_ for the queen to open
parliament after elections.
If the queen does not open Parliament, the
entire system ceases to function.
Yeah, sure. Dream on.
Under present British law, if the monarch
doesn't show up, for the opening,
Parliament cannot meet. It would be a
constitutional crisis. No monarch in
centuries has even considered not showing
up, so the problem has never arisen. If
some future monarch obdurately refused to
show up, the crisis would almost certainly
be resolved by extra-constitutional means.
In other words, the constitutional system
would cease to function.
Post by Michael KuettnerPost by Rich RostromNow suppose there is election in Fredonia,
and the results are (in seats won)
69 - Federalists
63 - Labor
30 - Reform
22 - Orthodox
17 - Republican
Is the head of state obliged to call on the
Federalists first? What if the incumbent
premier is a Laborite, who had been ruling
in coalition with Reform and the Republicans?
In any civilized country the party with the most
votes gets called to form a government.
Be it Germany, Israel, Austria, Itlay, etc.
The only exceptions to that are the USA...
The U.S. is not a parliamentary state and there
is no "formation of a government". The same is
true in all other "presidential/congressional"
states - including every country in Latin America,
the Republic of Korea, the Philippines, Indonesia,
South Africa and 18 other African countries
countries, Cyprus, and some others.
Post by Michael Kuettnerand their lapdog, the UK.
A pointless insult.
Post by Michael KuettnerAlthough there are parties nowadays
in the UK beside the Tories and the Whigs.
The "Whigs" haven't existed for a long time,
though the present "Liberal Democrat" party
is nominally a successor to the Liberal Party
which the Whigs formed. There are in fact 10
parties represented in the present parliament;
six are minor regional parties.
Post by Michael Kuettner(in civilized countries the president is not head of state)
So none of the presidential/congressional states
listed above are civilized countries?
Germany is not a civilized country? Because
the head of state is Federal President Joachim
Gauck. Nor France, Italy, Ireland, India,
Israel, or indeed any country which is not a
monarchy.
Post by Michael Kuettnerhe would be required to call the party with most of the votes first.
Is there is a provision of the German constitution
to that effect?
There was none in the Weimar constitution.
Post by Michael KuettnerPost by Rich RostromThus after July 1932, Germany was ruled
extra-constitutionally"; the constitutional
process was in abeyance after July.
No, it wasn't.
It was ruled like the USA this year. The states were
governed normally;
On 20 July 1932, Schleicher proclaimed martial law and
used Reichswehr troops to oust the elected government
of Prussia. Was that "normal"?
Post by Michael Kuettnerthe government was rather shaky.
Or would you claim that states of the united states
were governed extra-constitutionally while the
tea-party blocked Obama ?
This reflects rather severe ignorance
of both the U.S. Constitutional system
and recent American political events.
Under the Constitution of the Weimar
Republic, the Reichskanzler was appointed
by the Reichsprasident. The Reichskanzler
had to be approved by (or not rejected by)
a majority of the Reichstag. But nothing
constrained the President's choice.
In August 1932 through February 1933, there
was no Chancellor who had the approval of the
Reichstag.
Post by Michael KuettnerPost by Rich RostromPost by Michael KuettnerPost by Rich RostromNazi use of state police power against electoral rivals,
which was certainly a major factor in the 1933 election.
Btw. : The Nazis couldn't use "state police power" before
Adolf formed his cabinett; that would have only been
possible in Prussia, where Gƶring held power.
Prussia at the time was about half of Germany,
so the Nazis had plenty of scope for that abuse.
Yes, but the bureaucrats of Prussia didn't do anything for
the Nazis at that point.
Goring's authority in Prussia compelled Prussian
bureaucrats to assist the Nazis. Or enabled;
Many Nazis were appointed to positions in the
Prussian police agencies, many Nazi sympathizers
were promoted or appointed.
Post by Michael KuettnerPost by Rich RostromThat data is avoilable at
http://psephos.adam-carr.net/countries/g/germany/reichstag.txt
the website of Professor Alan Carr.
It shows that we use the same data when discussing the vote.
It would make little sense discussing the vote when both parties
had different data, wouldn't it ? ;-P
Professor Carr's data is drawn from the
same authoritative sources, and he includes
additional information, such as the vote
numbers, not just the percentages.
In any case, I would still like to find out what
point you think the voting results demonstrate.
Post by Michael KuettnerPost by Rich RostromAnd I don't see how that would affect Nazi
vote stealing.
Well, local propaganda would be stronger.
That has nothing to do with vote _stealing_.
Post by Michael KuettnerAFAIR, even dead people were alowed to vote for G.W.Bush.
And he won by 5 -4 with some judges ...
Another pointless insult.
Post by Michael KuettnerPost by Rich RostromPost by Michael Kuettner1932 : First 37,4, then only 33,1 percent of the votes in 1932.
In 1933, suddenly 43,9 %. Smells a little iffy, doesn't it ?
Not especially. The Nazis, having control of
the state, now had increased available funds to
operate their party apparatus.
Nope. Their party apparatus were the SA (which wasn't really
party) and SS...
The NSDAP was a political party; its _party_
organization included Goebbels' propaganda
organization, HItler's staff, the Gauleiters,
their staffs, district leaders, their staffs,
and thousands of canvassers. The SA was a
separate affiliated organization; the SS was
a special-purpose component of the Party.
The _party_ organization had many full-time
workers, hundreds of offices, and produced
vast amounts of printed propaganda. All this
had to be paid for. In late 1932, the NSDAP
ran out of money, and was literally reduced
to begging on street corners. (That is, Nazis
stood on street corners with collection cans,
soliciting coins from passers-by.) The wealthy
(and middle-class) supporters who had been
funding the NSDAP had mostly become unwilling;
they were discouraged by the failure of the
Nazis to win outright majorities or get into
the ministry.
When Hitler became Chancellor, that situation
changed. Also, many people, especially
businesses, donated money as "insurance" -
they didn't want to be seen as refusing the
party in power.
In addition, the Nazis were able to give
state jobs to many of their activists.
All this greatly improved the Nazi financial
position and their ability to turn out votes
by legitimate means. In addition, with Hitler
having actually attained power, many voters
now thought he could actually deliver on
promised policies they liked.
Aggregate votes increased by 2.5M above the
previous high on 31 July 1932. 0.5M new voters
were enrolled. Turnout peaked at 88.7%, compared
to 84.1% in July. The NSDAP vote increased by 3.5M.
The KPD and SPD were down 1M from July. The minor
parties both gained and lost. There's no obvious
"smoking gun" to indicate that the NSDAP committed
large scale vote fraud.
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The real Velvet Revolution - and the would-be hijacker.
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