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You should see the New Zealand map. Literally - all the urban seats went for Labour and all the rural seats went for the National (mainstream conservatives). Very few exceptions.

IMO, the fundamental divide in global politics today is this one - between cosmpolitanism and tradition. You saw this divide in the French referendum. You see it also in Quebec politics vis-a-vis questions about sovreignty, PQ vs. Liberal.

Ben P

by Ben P (wbp@u.washington.edu) on Sun Sep 18th, 2005 at 06:06:36 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Perhaps this distinction - between cosmopolitanism and tradition - isn't the best one to make in an election like Germany's, however, when the issues turned around economics primarily. Still, my sense is that the Bavarian voters are more sociall conservative than those in the rest of Germany? Or is this a wrong impression?
by Ben P (wbp@u.washington.edu) on Sun Sep 18th, 2005 at 06:08:13 PM EST
[ Parent ]
yes, that's true for the rural parts of Bavaria (i.e.: the most parts). But Munich is an SPD-city.
by Saturday (geckes(at)gmx.net) on Sun Sep 18th, 2005 at 06:26:36 PM EST
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