Today was election day in Finland. Luckily we shall have a second round because the current president Tarja Halonen got only 46,4 % of the votes.
I say only because her popularity came dramatically down during the last weeks. It is rather clear that she will be elected but I still think it was brilliant that it turned into a decent fight. I found it really odd that Halonen's campaign chief said publicly that Finns could have saved a lot of taxpayers' money by selecting her on the first round. There were also several commentaries in left-oriented media saying that Finns would have a historical opportunity to select a president on the first round. Historicaly opportunity to do what?
I shall vote for Halonen on the second round, that is for sure. But I found it alarming that there was a strong tendency in the campaign to de-politicise the elections.
Oh, by the way: we are not an insignificant country. BBC World covered the Finnish elections saying that the election debates were dominated by the neutral country's relationship with NATO.
Sunday, January 15, 2006
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
I`ve found these elections more open and a better venue for real democracy, than they were six years ago.And people still got the power: they CHOSE second round.
And Green Party candidate beat that fundamentalist nationalist loonie. I`ll drink my second round to that!
Not fair! I wanna vote for a president too! (Ooops, does that make me a republican [in the scandinavian sense]?)
Post a Comment