Iceland’s ‘Pirate Party’ Is Currently the Election Frontrunner

Eye patches for everyone!

Iceland’s ‘Pirate Party’ Is Currently the Election Frontrunner

Iceland’s ‘Pirate Party’ Is Currently the Election Frontrunner

By Kirk Miller

This was the year a third party could have made some waves.

Then, sadly, Gary Johnson happened.

Iceland, however, has found a new way to rock the political boat: the Pirate Party. On the eve of the Nordic island’s Oct. 29 election, local newspaper Morgunblaðið and the Icelandic Social Science Research Institute have released a poll showing the Pirates running at 22.6%, a point and a half ahead of the ruling Independence Party.

But don’t get your hopes up for an endless rum-and-pillage fest in Reykjavik.

This is a faction most concerned with online privacy — one proposal of theirs is for Iceland to act as a Switzerland for online data, where information stored there can’t be disclosed. Their leader, Birgitta Jonsdottir, was once a WikiLeaks activist.

And the party’s number one priority, according to their website? “Pirates emphasize critical thinking and well-informed decisions.”

Iceland uses proportional representation, meaning if the numbers hold, up the Pirate Party will end up with about 15 seats in a 63-member government.

Yar.

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