Underground USA
Underground USA
How Conservatives Can Win The Election But Lose The Government
0:00
Current time: 0:00 / Total time: -35:36
-35:36

How Conservatives Can Win The Election But Lose The Government

We just witnessed a political paradox in France. Conservatives tallied the most votes, but the socialists of the Macron government won power in the French National Assembly. This is a by-product of creating voting schemes that seek equitable outcomes instead of representative or democratic ones.

As reported by the Leftist and all-too-often propagandistic Associated Press:

“A Leftist coalition, the New Popular Front, has won the most seats in the 2024 French legislative election, beating back a far-Right surge but failing to win a majority. The outcome leaves France facing the stunning prospect of a hung parliament and threatens political paralysis in a pillar of the European Union…

“…they had just days to come together. The leaders of France’s Left-wing parties have acknowledged they made compromises to unite in an effort to keep the far-Right National Rally Party from taking power in France.

“The New Popular Front, named after a similar coalition formed in the 1930s against the rise of fascism in France…includes environmentalist parties, the French Socialists & Communists, and the hard-Left France Unbowed Party.”

While Macron’s gambit in calling snap elections blocked the possibility of National Rally president Jordan Bardella from becoming the next prime minister, he did so by artificially elevating the far-Left, with his candidates standing down in certain constituencies to give the best chance of defeating the RN.

So, the far-Right National Rally Party led France's snap elections on Sunday with 33% of the vote, with the Leftist alliance New Popular Front following in second place at almost 28%, and President Macron's ruling coalition trailing in third place with 20%. Yet, after the second round of voting, the results showed just over 180 seats for the New Popular Front Leftist coalition, Macron’s ruling coalition with more than 160 seats, and the far-Right National Rally Party diminished to a restricted to third place with just over 140 seats. France will have a hung parliament because of the system, not the voters. 

The French-Socialist Voting Scheme

The French election system, strategic voting, and the increased popularity of other parties contributed to the conservative bloc winning a majority of votes but losing seats in the 2024 legislative elections.

The French election system is a hybrid system that combines elements of both the “first-past-the-post” and proportional representation methods. The country is divided into 577 electoral districts, and each district elects a single representative to the National Assembly, the lower house of the French Parliament.

Candidates who receive an absolute majority of votes in the first round of voting are elected outright. If no candidate achieves this majority, a second round of voting takes place between the top two candidates, and the candidate with the most votes in the second round is elected.

In the 2024 legislative elections, the conservative bloc, which primarily consists of the Republicans and the Union of Democrats & Independents, won a majority of votes. However, they lost seats in the National Assembly. Seem inequitable? Does it seem like the far-Left stated electoral goal of “one person, one vote” is being tortured? You wouldn’t be wrong.

By all intents and purposes, the conservative bloc in France won the election and, by right, that majority should mandate the country's direction. But a system designed to provide “diversity, equity, and inclusion” has put the fundamental task of free elections on its head. The winner loses, and the losers, well, win.

The conservative bloc lost seats in the National Assembly due to several factors:

  • Strategic Voting: Some voters who preferred the conservative bloc chose to vote for other parties in the first round to prevent the far-Left or far-Right candidates from advancing to the second round. This strategy, known as tactical voting, can lead to a discrepancy between the popular vote and the number of seats won.

  • Increased Popularity of Lesser Parties: In the 2024 elections, several other parties, such as the centrist La République En Marche! (LREM) and the far-Left La France Insoumise (LFI), gained significant support from voters. This shift in voter preferences resulted in a more fragmented political landscape, making it more difficult for the conservative bloc to secure a majority of seats in the National Assembly.

  • Proportional Representation: And while the French electoral system primarily relies on the “first-past-the-post” method, a small number of seats are allocated using “proportional representation.” This element of the system favors smaller parties, which may have received a significant share of the vote but were not successful in winning individual electoral districts. Put succinctly, even though these smaller parties lost, because it’s all about equity – don’t you know – they are awarded seats to the detriment of others.

This Is Important Because Why?

This is important because we are seeing the metastasizing of this contrived “equity” scheme in US voting systems across the country.

The French system of elections and the voting system in Alaska and Maine share some similarities, particularly in their use of hybrid electoral methods. Alaska’s system combines elements of “first-past-the-post” – or ranked-choice – and proportional representation to determine the outcome of elections. In Maine, a “ranked-choice” system is used exclusively.

In the 2020 elections, Alaska adopted a new "ranked-choice voting" system for its state and federal elections. Under this system, voters rank candidates in order of preference. If a candidate receives an outright majority of first-choice votes, they are declared the winner. If no candidate achieves a majority, the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated, and their votes are redistributed to the remaining candidates based on voters' second-choice preferences. This process continues until a candidate reaches a majority of votes.

Both the French and Alaskan electoral systems aim to provide a “more equitable” representation of voter preferences by combining first-past-the-post and proportional representation methods. Of course, the arbiters of what is equitable are almost always the power-connected.

As of now, Maine is the only US state that uses a pure “ranked-choice” voting scheme for its federal elections, including presidential, congressional, and US Senate races. 

Several cities and municipalities across the United States – in California, Minnesota, New Mexico, Maryland, and Massachusetts – also use ranked-choice voting for local elections, doing so under the strained guise of promoting more diverse representation, reducing negative campaigning, and ensuring that elected officials have broader support from their constituents.

Of course, this gerrymandering on votes flies in the face of the Left’s demand for “one person, one vote,” as screeched by the likes of Hillary Clinton, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez & the Squad, and Bernie Sanders.

This is why voting integrity must be of a primary concern here in the United States. The media and the Left are quick to condemn those who identify serious issues with their ever-expanding voting schemes. But if we don’t dig in our heals and make a hard, “you shall not pass” stance to protect free and fair, purely democratic elections seated in a system that values apportionment exclusively in the Electoral College, we will end up like France: a conservative nation with a radically Marxist government run by globalists.

Then, our segment on America’s Third Watch, broadcast nationally from our flagship station WGUL AM860 & FM93.7 in Tampa, Florida.

Leave a comment

Become a paid subscriber to comment

Underground USA is reader-supported…Please consider becoming a paid subscriber

Discussion about this podcast

Underground USA
Underground USA
No Fear. No Political Correctness. No Wokeism. An irreverent fact-based podcast heard and read across 48 US states and 35 countries.