
It is the case for instance for Aftonbladet in sweden, which provide a test to help you situate yourself on the european party grid. The test, called EU Profiler has been developed by a european consortium for democracy from institutions in Italy, the Netherlands and Switzerland. You can make the test for all european countries and in all languages. Some questions are countries specific (like "The common EU currency euro should be introduced in Sweden"), some are not ("The European Union should be enlarged to include Turkey"). I'll not debate on the relevancy of the question, or the results (like matching such a broad test to the extremely thin program of the Pirate Party) but it's a good start before going to vote.
Comments
Yeah, I took the test yesterday. Pretty good I think. It confirmed what I already knew: that I'm hovering between several parties.
frebroSpeaking of the election... http://www.economist.com/blogs/char... ...interesting...
Bare@frebro I actually took the test for France and for Sweden and it's quite amazing to see the difference between the parties. French parties are much more euro-enthusiasts compared to swedish ones.
@Bare Since the beginning of Europe, politicians have chosen so many wrong ways to try to make people care. It is one of the main reasons of the failure of the constitution referendum in France in 2005...
Nicolas