To bring up Finnish politics again, there's an election on April 2 (I actually cast my advance vote today) and it is moderately likely that a small party, namely the Liberal Party, will gain their first seat(s) in the parliament. They've gotten a lot of popular support by small party standards and a bunch of well-known and well-respected names on their lists (they had no trouble filling up their lists in most districts, so we don't have electoral alliances with them like we have had in the past, as that would have combined our lists i.e. they would have had to drop half of their candidates), as well as enough financial support to put together a serious advertising campaign. They certainly aren't doing this by making triple sure they aren't upsetting anyone with their politics; on the contrary, they seem to feel pretty comfortable upsetting both conservatives and leftists, and they certainly have upset both of those groups multiple times.
Instead, they examined the entire state budget and made a list of things they think the state shouldn't be spending any money on, and they managed to save like €9 billion per year without suggesting any cuts to welfare, health care, education, or national security, while also lowering income taxes for the working class. They took a legitimate problem that people were having (the state struggling to economically recover from COVID, the war, and the energy crisis while all three are still ongoing) and proposed a decent solution. At that point, who's going to be like "oh the Liberals caught my attention, I'm open-minded enough to consider voting for some party I've never voted for before, and I would have voted for them otherwise but I really don't like their radical SJF views on trans people"? That's just silly, nobody reasonable thinks like that.