World Politics and Elections 2026

Started by Jubal, January 13, 2026, 03:39:33 PM

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Jubal

We're back, the year is a clusterfumble already, here goes.

Some previews of the year...

The most significant global elections this year are, I think, likely to be the following:
  • In Hungary, Viktor Orban faces his harshest political test yet: if he wins, the EU will probably have to conclude that there's no shifting him short of kicking the country out somehow, but if he loses it'll mean Putinist right-isolationism suddenly loses its biggest eastern European anchor at the very moment when it seems poised for big western European gains in 2027
  • In Brazil, the question is whether Lula can hold off the resurgent far right-wing and retain control. At some point, the sharp polarisation in the country might collapse and allow centrists through, but right now it doesn't show much sign of subsiding.
  • In the USA, the midterms will probably stall out the Republican legislative agenda unless Trump really gear-shifts to heightened authoritarianism in the coming months. If Trump's popularity really crashes through the floor then there are more potential downsides for him in the form of increased investigations.
  • The elections in Israel could be the last ditch attempt for Netanyahu to save his career and stay out of jail - again, potentially this is a crossroads, because I think Netanyahu with another term will manage to judicially/legally secure his position against all the corruption stuff. Excepting two pollsters that consistently give much higher Likud scores than everyone else, most polling suggests that the Israeli Arab parties are likely to hold the balance of power (which I think makes Netanyahu toast if it happens). Sadly all of this is not especially likely to help the Palestinians who have been the most significant victims of Netanyahu's political maneuvering, given that the opposition bloc is currently being very much led by hard-right Naftali Bennett's list.

Other elections of note:
  • Sweden looks poised to shift back left: the major right-wing parties are doing similarly to the last election, but the two smaller moderate parties in the "Tido" right-wing bloc, the Liberals and Christian Democrats, have lost support and might both fall out of parliament.
  • In Slovenia, the green-liberal leadership of Robert Golob is in trouble, and he's seriously lagging behind the hard right in the polls. He's still a solid second, though, and neither of those two parties will form a government alone. The very large number of other parties and 4% threshold might create a real mess, with only the Social Democrats on 6-8% completely reliably reaching the four percent margin. The Democrats, a centre-right anti-corruption party, Christian Democratic N.Si, anti-vax Resni.ca, extreme right SNS, and a left-green combination list are all in with a shot at the threshold, but it's unlikely all of those will get represented.
  • In Nepal, we'll find out what the new political order looks like after last year's Gen Z fuelled revolution. I don't think anyone's done any polling, the old political parties are mostly socialist and communist variants as far as I can tell but the sorts of figures the protestors wanted in charge may not be running in them. We'll find out!
  • In Armenia, my suspicion is that the conservative right will once again fail to actually unseat Pashinyan's centrist government. Pashinyan is not popular by any stretch of the imagination, but his opponents don't really have a good geopolitical answer that isn't "fight wars we'll obviously lose" or "cuddle up to Russia at a time when Russia doesn't have the resources to support Armenia". I suspect a competitive centre option could unseat Pashinyan, but one doesn't seem to be emerging right now.
  • In New Zealand it might be a pretty tight race between the right and left blocs, the Labor party is leading several recent polls but the Maori party is doing quite badly which may mean they don't get the allies they need to govern.
  • The Danish experiment with a centre government is likely to end as all the centre parties in it have lost support since the last election. Current polling suggests a blue-bloc government of the right is most likely, though whether the centre-right and hard right could work together well isn't totally clear. The election certainly isn't over either - not all polls show the right-bloc ahead, and if the Moderates stay in parliament and hold the balance of power they might seek to force another grand coalition into being.

Meanwhile, uh, the president of Venezuela got kidnapped by the Americans, who also have government thugs invading their cities and are threatening to end NATO, burn all their alliances, and invade Denmark? The Ukraine war looks as far away from ending as ever, and Iran's government is also shooting its citizens and being told off for it, ironically, by the Americans.

Some guesses for how the year will go globally:
  • Elections: I think the Democrats will win the House but not the Senate in the midterms, I think Tisza will win the Hungarian elections in reality but that Orban will finally stoop to actual ballot-stuffing and rig it.
  • Economy: I think there's an economic crash sometime in 2026, not sure of what severity but the AI market readjusting is going to be painful.
  • Events: I think the Iranian government won't fall in the end, this ends up being more Iran's Tianamen Square than a regime collapse. I think ultimately Trump won't invade Greenland, and won't put boots on the ground in a large way in Venezuela, though neither would be wildly surprising if it happened. I suspect there'll still be a military front-line in Ukraine in December.
The duke, the wanderer, the philosopher, the mariner, the warrior, the strategist, the storyteller, the wizard, the wayfarer...

Jubal

We have had some elections! None of my "big four"  yet but still some interesting results:

In Nepal, the new government is run by Balendra Shah, an engineer turned rapper turned politician who's run as an anti-corruption, somewhat nationalist figure. Exactly what his politics will look like beyond that is unclear.

In Slovenia, the Freedom Movement of Robert Golob (and this I did not expect) managed to close the gap and very narrowly come first in the election. The campaign ended up mired in allegations of foul play - the right alleged the left-liberal government were corrupt, the government pointed out that the right had basically engaged a private spying firm with links to Mossad to attack them. The hard-conservative SDS, the main opposition, is trying to challenge some aspects of the election result but this seems unlikely to succeed.

As expected neither major party is close to a majority, and the government has lost its majority, such that there are basically four options: a right-government where the SDS manages to negotiate with the two moderate conservative parties and resni ca to lock the left out, a centre-right government of the two moderate conservative parties, one left party, and the Freedom Movement, or a centre-left government of the left and Freedom Movement plus one right-wing party. Or new elections, which is the fourth option. My current expectation is that option three (probably Demokrati/Freedom Movement/SocDems/Left-Greens), followed by option four as that government might not last a full term, would be the most likely thing. The way Jansa is talking it doesn't sound like he's keen on running a four party coalition and the Democrats might not enjoy working with resni ca because the latter are total wingnuts and the former are running largely on a platform of Not Being Total Wingnuts. The centre-right option (NSi/Democrats/Freedom/SocDems) might be more stable but would also force more concessions out of Golob who has basically governed from the left thus far.

In Denmark, the Moderates and Social Democrats recovered in large part due to a small rally-round-the-flag bump over Trump's Greenland threats. This wasn't enough to secure a red-bloc win and put the SDs back in a prime position, but it does appear to have been enough to secure a situation where the Moderates hold the balance of power. The coalition I imagine they'll be pushing for could be something like Social Democrats and Radikale Venstre from the left bloc, Moderates anchoring in the middle, and Venstre and the Liberal Alliance from the right bloc, which would be a messy coalition but is probably the most centre option possible (despite their name Radikale are actually fluffy centre-left liberals).

There have also been a range of interesting more local elections. In France the socialists managed to hold off the far right in a bunch of places, and potential centre-right presidential frontrunner Philippe manage to win the mayoralty of Le Havre which he'd said was a prerequisite to him running for the presidency. In Australia, the Labor party absolutely flattened all comers in the South Australia election, much of the focus was on hard-right One Nation eating big chunks of the "primary" first-round vote but in practice it doesn't make much difference in Australia's electoral system if the two-party preferences lean very heavily towards Labor which they're continuing to do. And in Germany the state of Rhineland-Palatinate went pretty badly for the Social Democrats, but with the CDU winning the election overall. And in Italy reforms to weaken the judiciary's power have been rejected, a defeat for the right-wing government of Giorgia Meloni.

In total, if there's a picture so far it feels like it might be one of just enough voters in Europe going "eep maybe let's not have more of this Trump nonsense" - the Iran war and Greenland crisis might have helped persuade a small but critical mass of voters that actually the far right mantra of isolationism is a bit of a sham if the far right globally are suddenly going to start cheering on mass bombing campaigns.
The duke, the wanderer, the philosopher, the mariner, the warrior, the strategist, the storyteller, the wizard, the wayfarer...