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I'm not British or German, but wasn't there a state victory for a far-right party in Germany recently?
It feels like many people learned how horrible this stuff is, but a mixture of hate and ignorance trumps knowledge.
You're right. Tge AfD won the most seats in Thuringia. History rhymes. I guess one important factor is cognitive dissonance. I understand that people are unhappy with current politics for multiple reasons and I think some want to believe the propaganda in tge hopes that things will get better but knowing deep in themselves that these demagogues don't promote any policies that will actually help them. At least I hope so.
That's probably fair. There was a great article around the sociology of Brexit, with the main takeaway being that with the right rising in Europe, a Trump presidency wasn't as unlikely as some made it out to be the first time. What they determined was that when things are shit with no hope of things improving, people will happily take what they perceive as short-term pain for long-term gain.
For many, they'll happily tank their economy and destroy their healthcare systems if it means fewer brown people - and that's a really depressing thing we're seeing practically everywhere.
I believe you're thinking of Austria and while that's scary as fuck the party is so politically unpopular that while they won a plurality they've failed to form government.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cn02w01xr2jo
It was both countries, sadly.
Not comparable at all.
In Austria it was the whole country that voted, in Germany it was „only“ a state that represents 2.5% of Germanys population.
Still concerning, but historically the east of Germany tends to elect way more right wing politicians and it still only makes up 15% of the population in total.
Im the west of Germany, far right parties have much less voters. Still too many, but not enough to put them in a position where they can get into power.