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Untitled

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"FDR's New Deal policies represented an entirely new phenomenon in American politics, which sprang out of nowhere in response to the Great Depression which began in 1929 under Herbert Hoover. "

Say WHAT? Let's re-read this...

FDR's New Deal policies (check) FDR's New Deal policies represented an entirely new phenomenon in American politics (OK), which sprang out of nowhere (WTF?) in response to the Great Depression which began in 1929 under Herbert Hoover.(DUH!)

Just "sprang out of nowhere?" HellOOOO???

I'm going to re-write that sentence so it isn't quite so painfully stupid.

"sprang out of nowhere".... christ on a bike....

Hwarwick 10.54 12/07/04

In my defense, it was late. And try not to be so critical--it alienates other users. Best, [[User:Meelar|Meelar (talk)]] 12:43, 13 Jul 2004 (UTC)

Same here - I wrote that when it was rather late and I was cranky. Sorry for coming off like such a meany. I thought I did a pretty good job of re-working the line, though. Also: thanks for the article in general - it's otherwise a very good work. best,

Hwarwick

No problem. I appreciate it. Yours, [[User:Meelar|Meelar (talk)]] 20:40, 13 Jul 2004 (UTC)

Also: If you'd be so kind:

The article reads


If the posited 36-year cycle of realigning elections were valid, the next realigning election would occur with the U.S. presidential election, 2004.


I am praying for this to be true.


However: it would be really cool if you could reference the position of the 36 year cycle. Perhaps like this:

If the 36 year cycle of realigning elections is actual, as posited by (fill in with a link or the name and citation), the next realigning election will occur with the U.S. presidential election, 2004


Mostly, I just want to know who came up with that cycle...


Also, how do you get all that UTC stuff to show up after your name???

Hwarwick

Well, the UTC stuff is done by typing four tildes, like this: ~~~~. Typing only three will sign your name, without a timestamp.
As for the 36 year cycle, I'd love to be able to help--unfortunately, most of the books I used in this are in summer storage right now (and I currently have no access to them, or to a university library), so I couldn't answer this right now. Best, [[User:Meelar|Meelar (talk)]] 20:56, 13 Jul 2004 (UTC)
The 36 year cycle was decided upon after graphing the number of years between elections that were realigning. It seems to be a fairly standard figure. At least, the cycle is defined as being 36 years long in every place I've ever seen realigning elections discussed. The source I'm currently looking at is the textbook, "American Government" by James Q. Wilson and John J. DiIulio, Jr., 9th edition. 24.14.254.14 16:09, 9 Jan 2005 (UTC)

2004's election

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I honestly think this should be added as a possible realigning election. While it may have been close, with President Bush winning re-election by a margin of about 3 percent, he won reelection while increasing his party's lead in both the House and the Senate.

Furthermore, given the increased importance of foreign policy and fighting terrorism in this election, as well as the number of Republican voters shifting over to Democrats (typically due to fiscal issues), and vice versa (due to foreign policy, as evident by figures such as Zell Miller, Ed Koch, and Ron Silver, who were Democrats, but endorsed Bush in 2004).

There also does seem to be a bit of a shift to the right in public opinion polls.

Just a thought.--RNJBOND 10:13, Feb 8, 2005 (UTC)

I find your analysis extremely dubious. Increasing congressional margins is not traditionally a criteria for a realigning election. The emergence of new defining issues is, but the major feature is substantial shifts in geographic and demographic voting patterns, which simply didn't happen. However, none of that really matters, because what you're suggesting is original research and hence doesn't belong here. If someone notable, preferably a political scientist, suggests 2004 as a realignment, we can include that speculation. Until then, Wikipedia's not the place for this. RadicalSubversiv E 11:40, 8 Feb 2005 (UTC)
2004 may well be for the Republicans what 1964 was to the Democrats; the last shining victory for a party that had dominated the last couple decades, before the great plunge in the next election. But that remains to be seen; the current Republican party is far from a spent force, and the next election is far from being the slam dunk many people assume it will be.
If we are entering a period of realignment in favor of the Democrats, then 2006, not 2004, will have been the marker that began it. But that's not to be taken for granted. For 2006 to have been a realigning election, a few things have to happen;
1) Barack Obama winning the upcoming election.
2) The Democrats stabilizing the economy.
3) The Democrats finally making meaningful changes in the system, of the sort Clinton wasn't able to because of his congress; finally introducing universal health care is the obvious one.
And finally, the Democratic majority and the changes they introduce need to stick around for longer than just a couple election cycles. 2006 was largely a backlash against the corruption and incompetence of the Bush administration, and 2008, should Obama win, will be due to fear over the economic crisis. The question is, can the Democrats turn this into a true shift of public confidence in their favor, or will that go away as soon as the Bush memories have faded and the economy's settled down a little?
In 1994, the Republicans also thought they'd managed a long-term realignment. Turns out they were wrong; their majority in Congress went away in twelve short years, their president turned into a lame duck, and above all, they have done nothing to change the system. (Roe v. Wade is still the law of the land; the gay rights and women's rights movements have gained rather than lost ground in the battle for public opinion; the legacy of the New Deal stands unharmed; and the tax cuts for the rich will go away as soon as the next Democratic president comes in, like they always do). The "realignment" of 2006 could turn out the same way; a temporary fluke which came from voter discontent but ultimately accomplished nothing. I hope that's not the case, but only history will tell. 147.9.177.22 (talk) 03:37, 14 October 2008 (UTC)[reply]
very perceptive on the part of 147.9.177.22 -- can we call you Catch22 for short? Rjensen (talk) 05:11, 14 October 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Why thank you, sir. Catch22 is fine, and I stand by what I said. Step 1 is complete, okay. Now let's wait for the more difficult step 2 and the far more difficult step 3. After that, I'll happily call it a realignment. 147.9.232.179 (talk) 19:58, 5 November 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I think this page should be revamped

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My objections to the article in its present form:

1. It's not NPOV. For example, it specifically states that a realignment occured under Reagan, which is not at all objective fact. It is certainly a fair theory, but should not be stated as it is.

2. It does not discuss the cyclical theory except in passing. Since in common usage, American realignments are understood to occur once in a generation, or every 36-years, that should be noted. They are also thought to favor one party over another.

3. It does not discuss even the most obvious criticisms of the theory. Changes occur in politics all the time, and it's not at all clear that elections can be sorted usefully into a series of multi-decade spans.

4. The obvious questions are not addressed: "What are the unmistakable characteristics of a realignment? How can we tell when we are in the middle of one? And how do we avoid mistaking an attractive but misleading detour for the genuine historical crossroads we are looking for?"

5. a. If new policies define a realignment, then it's not at all clear that 1896 is a realigning election. The elections of 1876 and 1912 brought about far more policy innovation on the part of the federal government: the end of Reconstruction in the first instance, and the enactment of Wilson's progressive economic agenda in the second.

b. If a realigning election is marked by a drastic reshuffling of votes, 1896 is also a flop. The Republican vote went up, but not dramatically. The Democratic vote hardly changed at all. And taking into account the nation as a whole, there was no significant change in partisan loyalties as compared to many other elections. (Consider 1876 and 1920)

c. If a realigning election is a change in parties, then 1816, not 1800, should be cited as a realigning election. The Federalists came within one state of winning in 1812. It was the war that pushed them to borderline treason, ultimately leading to their demise.

-- WikiAce 23:01, 15 October 2005 (UTC)[reply]


1993 Canadian

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Is the 1993 Canadian election a "realigning" one? I mean, new parties were created and won votes, but really, they were the same groups that were in the PCs voting for the same reasons. Now, wouldn't 1988 be more of a realigning election, with nationalists in the PCs and Free trade Liberals switching sides?Habsfannova 05:12, 15 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

2006's election

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I think the individual who thought the 2004 election was a possible realigning election was, um, probably wrong. But thank you for playing.

The 2006 Canadian federal election ought to be removed. It was certainly not a dramatic turning point since the Conservative Party only won a minority government, a point further reinforced by their second failure to secure a majority in the 2008 election. If 2006 is to be considered part of a long-term realignment of parties, then I think it is far too early to tell whether or not this is true. Until the Conservative Party secures a majority I don't think this can be argued. And, of course, there is nothing guaranteeing a Conservative Party majority government. In short, a dramatic realigning election such as 1896 in Canada or 1980 in the United States is fairly self-evident. On the other hand, drawn-out realigning elections require far more historical hindsight and are still problematic in that a "tipping point" in a longer process is far less salient let alone obvious to those who live through it. --Doug Nesbitt (talk) 20:09, 8 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]

This page needs cleaning up

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Quite apart from the fact that it's currently divided up into US elections (two sections) and the whole of the rest of the world (one section) there seem some surprising omissions. For example, I'm British, and would most definitely include the 1997 UK election that brought Tony Blair to power. Is there a good reason that's been left out? 86.132.143.43 00:59, 28 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I agree. I am from the US, but I think this article is a mess and parts of it are wrong or very subjective. It needs citations (not sources, citations) and it needs more intl perspectives. I made some changes to tighten up but more clean-up might be in order. Journalist1983 15:48, 6 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

The GOP started electing Senators South in 1960s, with John Tower of Texas a famous case. The behavior of actual voters is a critical element in realignment and cannot be deleted. Rjensen 19:11, 6 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

First off, I have spent a good deal of time in Texas, and Texas is perhaps nominally a southern state. Don't try to tell Ft. Worth they're in the South. A much better example would probably be Strom Thurmond, SC, who changed parties in the 60s. However, these are anomolies. I guess you could stretch and try to say U.S. Senate realignment began in the 60s, but it didn't grab hold in the deep south until the 80s and even 90s. For example, Alabama didn't budge toward a Republican Senator until 1981, when Reagan was swept in. And it wasn't until the mid 90s when Shelby changed parties. Re actual voters -- to me, this is a cause/effect issue; the voters themselves change because of other dynamics, and my view is any discussion of the voters should meld into the article and not be a separate section.

Finally, if you disgree, rather than RV everything, how about looking critically at all the changes. Pls. don't just revert everything because you disagree with portions. Journalist1983 00:56, 7 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

yes, and please don't blank whole sections that are proper and on target. To say that the GOP STARTED to take senate seats in the 1960s is accurate, of course. (1950s and 1970s would be untrue). Rjensen 04:00, 7 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

This is a mess. Journalist1983 08:24, 7 September 207 (UTC)

Agreed. I am not good at actually editing articles, but I would suggest that someone reword the article to remove most of these bulleted lists. I can see where they could be helpful, but it seems like they've gone a little overboard here. 24.174.0.229 00:36, 5 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I would argue that the 1932 General Election in Ireland was a realigning election, in that since then, the Fianna Fáil party has been the largest political party, and has governed for 58 years. mango2002 05:40 , 10 September 2008 (UTC)

US 2008 Election and 2006 Combined = Realignment if all promises are held?

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Senate and House have lost a lot of GOP seats, at least according to official poles. Barrack Obama got elected by a landslide, being the first African American to set foot in a presidential office, which is a major move towards civil rights. Nancy Pelosi was first female speaker of the house in 2006, yet another example of civil rights. The economy has basically collapsed with a huge stock market crash as people have been ensuing chaos on Wall Street and stocks falling to record lows in over 5 years. It now just remains to be seen if these elections will change history and undo all the damage from 2000-2008 in what may be called the worst presidential term ever in US History, as ratings for G.W. Bush plummet to 20%. Turnouts in 2008 have been at record high levels, unlike anything ever seen in history, and many electoral states gone from Red to Blue since both 2000 and 2004. What we are witnessing is a huge change in the US government, enough to break down the barriers of race, sex, and religion that have been long fought over in history. What astonishes me the most is that Barrack Obama is "trying" to break down all of Washington and make it so that there are no more empty promises or lies (You can argue against this if you wish), and I really hope that he will keep his promises to be honest, as honesty is something I have yet to see in any president in my lifetime, being 28 years of age. If he pulls through and does everything he says and follows through on all his promises, then I think it is fair to say we have a re-alignment. The thing is, we all have to do our part to help and unite ourselves under the nation, because we are ultimately in charge of our nation, not one person. As JFK said before my time, "Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country." and Obama says, "Yes We Can." It's this ideology that remains yet to be seen, and only time will tell if politics have evolved in the next few years. (63.200.199.41 (talk) 21:23, 5 November 2008 (UTC))[reply]

It is not the place for liberal propaganda. It is a place for discussions about the page itself.Eros of Fire (talk) 22:01, 6 November 2008 (UTC)[reply]

What about 1992?

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Beginning with 1992, several states broke from their former Republican leanings and became generally Democratic states. Most of them, including large states like California, Michigan, Illinois, and Pennsylvania have unbroken streaks of giving their electoral votes to the Democratic ticket. This also includes Vermont, which had famously been a Republican state that had only gone Democratic once before. Two others (New Mexico and New Hampshire) have gone Democratic in four out of five elections. TheUnknown285 (talk) 00:21, 18 April 2010 (UTC)[reply]

This is indeed the huge realignment == much more than 2008. Indeed, eighteen states that Bill Clinton won in 1992 have yet to vote for any Republican nominee for President since 1992, inclusively, often despite being reliable GOP wins before then. It is arguable that Bill Clinton had a political ideology very similar to Jimmy Carter, who had lost most of those states that now seem reliably Democratic even in 1976. All Presidential elections from 1988 to 2008 are variants on the 1992 election. Clinton won all of them twice, Gore won them all, Kerry won them all, and Obama won them all by margins greater than 10%.


It is possible to list the states and districts by electoral behavior since 1992:

1. CA CT DE DC HI IL ME MD MA MI NJ NY OR PA RI VT WA WI ... 5 for 5 D, the so-called Blue Firewall

2. IA NH NM ... 4 for 5 D, all going once for George W. Bush

3. FL OH... 2 or 3 for 5 D, large states that could have decided the election the other way in which GOP manipulation of electoral results is often accused of deciding the 2000 or 2004 elections.

4. CO NV close in 2000 and 2004, but not close enough for anyone to suspect anything fishy -- and not as big prizes

5. AZ GA MO MT Clinton won once or twice, but reasonably close in 2008 or a Republican win largely due to the Favorite Son effect

6. IN NC VA NE-02 voted only for Obama as a Democrat and reliably Republican since at least 1976

7. AR KY LA TN WV Clinton won twice, and have steadily drifted Republican; Obama lost all of those states by margins in excess of 10%.

8. All else -- AL AS ID KS MS NE (except for NE-02) ND OK SC SD TX UT WY -- reliably R in all elections since at least 1980.


Groups 2, 3, and 4 -- and possibly 5 -- are likely battleground states in any elections after 2008 except in landslides. Group 6 is surprise Obama wins in 2008. Except for Virginia, which has been drifting D in national elections, the other three in Group 6 could have easily gone the other way. If IN or NC is an Obama win in 2012 in something other than an electoral blowout, then Group 6 suggests a realignment. Otherwise they look like flukes.

Group 7 now looks like states that a Democrat can win only as a perceived moderate or conservative from the South (Carter, Clinton). Gore, Kerry, and Obama were apparently the wrong sorts of Democrat to win any of those states.

One may see a long-term trend. It is worth noting that Barack Obama won only one state that Dwight Eisenhower did not win (North Carolina), and that one barely. It could be that the Democratic Party used to be strongest in the South and weaker in the North before the 1960s, and the opposite was true in 2008. Pbrower2a (talk) 04:50, 28 June 2010 (UTC)[reply]

2008

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I think it can be safely said now that this was not a realigning election. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 144.173.229.180 (talk) 08:07, 10 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]

2006 as well - I don't think we can call it any kind of a realignment when the Democratic gains were wiped out (and then some) only four years later. 98.209.116.7 (talk) 05:07, 2 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Care to rethink that assessment today? 2600:1003:B011:BA95:F617:CAE4:67B7:635E (talk) 03:12, 12 November 2012 (UTC)[reply]

All elections are re-aligning elections

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I was directed to this article from a link in Politics of Canada; specifically, the section entitled Realignment: Conservatives in Power, in which an editor has put forth Beheils rather dubious theory proposing "that Canada has recently undergone a watershed political realignment" which, presumably, means that, federally, we have several successive majority Conservative governments to look forward to.

I fall into the camp who find this whole concept rather laughable. It reminds me somewhat of those who play the lottery each week, carefully selecting their number sequences to somehow find a way to "beat the odds" and find patterns where none exist.

The reality is that each and every election is a realignment. Some alignments are bigger than others, and some are potentially the beginnings of longer trends (not unlike those oft-sought-after-but-rarely-achieved "dynasties" in sport), but it is only with the benefit of hindsight that we can apply any such hypothesis as this. There are too many variables in the short term political and economic environments to support this dubious theory. That is why there is so much discussion on these pages as to which election year was or was not a "re-aligning election". The pattern is in the eye of the beholder.

The 36-year-cycle hypothesis is particularly suspect. If this were the case then we in Alberta (a land which should be the model demographic for the 36 year theory) should have been free and clear of the provincial PC rule sometime around 2007. Sadly, there is still no end in sight. Perhaps it would be best to title this article "Wishful Thinking" so it better explains, for example, the huge disconnect between what the pundits were saying before election day and what actually happened in the 2012 Alberta election!

Similarly, at the federal level, it remains to be seen whether the surge in popularity in Quebec of the federal NDP will survive the death of their very charismatic leader recently, or whether it was just a single election blip of protest. Can the federal Liberals rebuild, or do we have several more elections of regional fragmentation coming up, leaving us to look forward to more minority Conservative governments or, according to Beheils hypothesis, a future pattern of Conservative majority governments?

If it were entirely up to me, this entire article qualifies for deletion - in my humble opinion - but there seems to be enough interest to keep it around for at least a while longer. ;-)Garth of the Forest (talk) 20:54, 7 September 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Canadian experts for several years now seem convinced that something very dramatic happened to the Liberal party not to mention the conservatives, and the New Democrats. That's what dramatic political shakeups look like in different countries, where they're called realignments. Rjensen (talk) 07:41, 16 March 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Merger proposal

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I propose that Realigning election be merged into Party system. I think that the content in the Realigning election article can easily be explained in the context of Party system. Mitchumch (talk) 10:42, 20 January 2015 (UTC)[reply]

oppose. They are entirely distinct concepts, with realigning elections focused on voter behavior, and party systems focusing on the rules and behavior political parties. Rjensen (talk) 13:57, 20 January 2015 (UTC)[reply]
oppose. This article is about the concept itself, not about partisan politics in general. There is no better place for this content.Circumspice (talk) 21:24, 30 January 2015 (UTC)[reply]
oppose Realigning elections are important enough to deserve their own article. The party system should be referenced for context but both articles do not need to be merged. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 108.20.207.19 (talk) 01:34, 16 March 2015 (UTC)[reply]
oppose This is a valid subject on its own. It needs its own article. "Party system" is far too general. 24.27.62.110 (talk) 18:49, 28 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]

I've removed the proposed merge tag given the consensus above. Mike Christie (talk - contribs - library) 12:13, 24 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

2016 United States Presidential Election

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I added a section on the 2016 Election just now because it is obviously realigning. The pundits and political scientists haven't had time to analyze it enough, but there's no question that realignment has taken place in the last 24 hours. I know the section that I wrote just now is a little haphazard, so it probably should be edited and reorganized, but I felt obligated to put the section there ASAP given the importance of what just took place. I encourage, or even implore, everybody to improve the section as more and more information comes in. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Astrohoundy (talkcontribs) 10:23, 9 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]

all text must be based on reliable secondary sources. The text here has lots of problems (eg it only deals with the Midwest and says zip about angry anti-elite voters). the 1920s were not isolationist. Rjensen (talk) 11:05, 9 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I agree that secondary sources need to be used, but there isn't enough data to mention anti-elite voters. Even if there is enough data about anti-elitism, it doesn't mean that the facts concerning the Midwest should be deleted. As for the 1920's, isolationism was definitely the dominant foreign policy philosophy, it was exemplified by America's refusal to join the League of Nations, and it was articulated by Henry Cabot Lodge the Elder.Astrohoundy (talk) 03:18, 11 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]
The isolation came in 1930s [break with London conf 1933, the neutrality acts-. In 1920s US took the lead in disarmament [Washington conf, Kellogg-Briand, opposing poison gas] and solving German reparations issues [Dawes Plan, Young Plan] & international finance [William Appelman William "The Legend of Isolationism in the 1920s" Science and Society (1954). On the debate see a quick summary at John Martin Carroll; George C. Herring (1996). Modern American Diplomacy. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 61. and esp p 62 Rjensen (talk) 03:54, 11 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]
2016 is definitely not a re-aligning election, as is shown in the 2020 Presidential election. The winner of a re-aligning election typically wins by a substantial margin in both the popular vote and in the electoral college, neither of which Trump did, and wins a second term much the same way the next time, which Donald Trump did not do. 1992 (with Bill Clinton winning a large number of states that Democrats had not won since 1968 that have largely since gone for Democrats in Presidential elections) and 2008 (with Obama pulling Colorado, New Mexico, and Virginia, seemingly permanently into the Democratic fold). 2008 looks much like a near-inverse of one of Eisenhower win of the 1950's. Obama won in 2012 much as he did in 2008, and except for Hawaii and the District of Columbia (which were not voting in the 1950's) Obama won 331 electoral votes but none in any state that Eisenhower did not win twice!

The 2020 electoral map looks much like that of 2016 except that five states and the Second Congressional District of Nebraska went from Trump to Biden. It is easy to see why in 2016 many saw the 2016 Presidential election as a realignment. Americans elected someone unlike any President that they had ever elected, someone who used very different styles of political argument. Five states changing their affiliation in a re-election bid for an incumbent President is not particularly unusual; five states changed sides between 1992 and 1996 (Colorado, Georgia, and Montana going from Clinton to Dole and Clinton picking up Arizona and Florida in a near-wash), three between 2000 and 2004 (Dubya losing New Hampshire but picking up Iowa and New Mexico), and two (Obama losing Indiana, North Carolina, and the Second Congressional District of Nebraska between 2012 and 2016. Going farther back in time, Reagan gained five states from 1980 to his 49-state landslide in 1984. Eisenhower had four states swing, three toward him (Kentucky, Louisiana, and West Virginia) while Missouri swung away from him.

My sources for this discussion are maps generated by Dave Leip in his Leip's Atlas of American Elections ( https://uselectionatlas.org/ ), except for conclusions that I have draw from his reputable maps and an overlay that I generated using his map-generator and his data comparing Eisenhower and Obama elections:

https://talkelections.org/FORUM/index.php?topic=205905.msg4452938#msg4452938

...................

I suggest that the idea that the 2016 Presidential election be a realigning election be removed as wrong in the context of American history.Pbrower2a (talk) 20:54, 24 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]

" ...except for conclusions that I have draw from his reputable maps and an overlay that I generated" is exactly the kind of original research that may or not be accurate, and may or may not be interesting, but regardless has, IMO, no legitimate place on Wikipedia generally, and particularly not on a talk page for discussing improvements to the article, not a forum for general discussion of the article's subject.
Besides that, Wikipedia is not a newspaper. We need to be especially vigilant about this kind of opining that arises when the topic is one that gets heated and the time frame is more or less the present. Dgndenver (talk) 17:25, 16 June 2023 (UTC)[reply]

UK examples?

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I understand this is mainly a term from American politics, but some examples from British history have been added here, so I thought I'd make a space to discuss them. If 'realigning election' means an election where there's a change in who the main two parties are, then the last one in the UK was 1922. If in a broader sense it means an election where there's a significant and lasting change in the groups of people voting for the main parties, then the UK examples I'd say should be listed are 1922, 1945, 1979, 1997, and either 2015 or 2019 (2015 was certainly a realigning election in Scotland). Coincidentally that's not too different from the list at Landslide victory, which suggests there may be considerable overlap between those articles... Robofish (talk) 16:38, 14 December 2019 (UTC)[reply]

2011 Finnish Parliamentary Elections

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Hey,

I think the 2011 Finnish Parliamentary elections should be added. The "Big Three" of Kokoomus (centre right), Centre Party and Social Democrats, that had dominated Finnish national politics since the Communists had faded in the late 70s and early 80s, were now to become the "Big Four" with the Finns Party gaining 3rd place with 39 seats, an increase of 34 in a single election and +15% in the popular vote. It further brought anti-establishment, anti-EU and anti-immigrant policies to the "mainstream", as previously those views had not reached a popular discussion point, but they became heated topics in debates, rhetoric and discussion. Page 3: https://vaalit.fi/documents/5430845/7278629/ETYJ-raportti/ecf3a11b-8039-4e39-ae62-fc41530a1c2a/ETYJ-raportti.pdf?t=1522061924000 — Preceding unsigned comment added by MarcoHamilton12 (talkcontribs) 18:50, 10 May 2022 (UTC)[reply]