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I'm not sure how I feel abour the parties that won the election now executing the plans of the losing party, in order to prevent that party from winning an election next time.
I am with you, I think it's a dumb idea. I believe we will suffer from this when the extreme right gains more political ground because of it.
I actually don't think that they do it with the intention that the far right won't get more votes:
https://www.stern.de/kultur/asyl-im-merz-wahlkampf--so-sind-sie-halt--die-auslaender-35444510.html
But hasnt this always been done? One example that comes to my mind, is CDU deciding to phase out atomic reactors or legalizing gay marriage because of the pressure from the greens.
It was done, because they could win elections with it, as those policies were genuinly popular and still mostly are. After Fukushima the greens were winning state elections against the CDU. There are also a fairly high number of gay conservative politicans in Germany. Jens Spahn and Alice Weidel come to mind.
It's a political necessity really. If you keep denying the losing party any influence, they'll grow bigger.
The Danish political system has very successfully stopped the far right parties by acknowledging their concerns and bringing some but not all of their policies into the centrist parties. Honestly this is probably much better than the alternative of the far right parties getting more and more influence.