Sweden Election

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
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The only fact that matters is that the vast swaths of First World cannot afford basic shit like energy to heat their homes and run their businesses. And the root problem is the green madness. Putin only exposed it, so thanks Vlad!
No, climate change is the problem.
You're just a frog in a pot.
There is plenty of money going to renewables that will make sure we can still heat our homes without burning dead dinosaurs.
 

oil&gas

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Apr 16, 2002
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The astonishing rise of the right-wing Sweden Democrats


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What is the origin of the Sweden Democrats?

Founded in 1988, the Sweden Democrats unified various elements in Sweden's far-right milieu, including fascists and white power proponents. "Some of them also had ties to openly neo-Nazi movements," said Johan Martinsson, a political science professor at Sweden's University of Gothenburg.

Around the mid-90s, however, new party leadership publicly denounced Nazism.

"Gradually, the party began to normalize and ban outright racism," explained Martinsson, who has written an extensive paper on the party. Openly extremist members were ejected, and its platform reshaped.

But according to Bulent Kenes, a persecuted former editor of a Turkish newspaper who has been living in Sweden since seeking asylum since 2016, "They keep a hidden agenda." He believes the party merely put a compassionate face on its neo-Nazi ideology in order to make it more socially acceptable.

A fresh face in party leadership

In 2005, current party leader Jimmie Akesson came to head the group. Only 26 at the time, the former member of the Moderate party pushed the Sweden Democrat's image away from its far-right roots, taking it in more of a populist direction.

Paralleling other right-populist movements, the party sought to portray itself as "advocating for 'ordinary people' against a corrupt elite at the height of a global recession," wrote scholar Danielle Lee Tomson in a paper on the rise of the Sweden Democrats.

As part of its push to project a gentler image, the party's logo was also changed: from the Swedish flag embodied as a flaming torch to the pennywort flower in flag colors of yellow and blue.

The party made its debut in the Riksdag in 2010 when it gained almost 6% of the vote.

But it struggled to gain traction and was considered a pariah in coalition-building.

That changed after the migration crisis of 2015.

Sweden Democrats go mainstream

Due largely to the civil war in Syria, Europe was faced with a wave of largely Muslim refugees in 2015. Over the course of one year, 1.3 million people fled to Europe; Sweden took in some 163,000 asylum-seekers (Germany took in around 1 million).

Sweden that year saw the second-highest number of asylum applications per capita in Europe, after Hungary.

Political scientist Martinsson sees this as a major factor in the party gaining traction.

"The main reason for the party's success in the last decade has been Sweden's uniquely high number of asylum-seekers and unusually rapidly changing demographics in terms of ethnicity and the share of foreign-born citizens," he told DW in an interview from Gothenburg.

With immigration as a top topic in both the 2014 and 2018 elections in Sweden, the Sweden Democrats capitalized on this concern.

Turkish journalist Kenes, who has extensively profiled the party, said its defense of "Swedishness" brings results.

"Especially undereducated people feel a threat from the cheap labor of immigrants," he said. "They think [the governing] Social Democrats are not representing their interests anymore."

Increasingly visible criminal violence and gang activity are also playing a role in the rise of the Sweden Democrats.

The party more than doubled its position in the 2014 election, gaining around 13% of votes. In 2018, that share became 18%.

When the center-right Moderates agreed to cooperate with the Sweden Democrats in 2019, this set the stage for eventual entrance to governing.

Caught off guard by current surge

"It is surprising for me to see them as the second-biggest party in the elections," Kenes told DW, as the Sweden Democrats had lost ground during the pandemic as voters turned more toward established parties.
Speaking from Stockholm, he said that aside from the immigration issue, the economic effects of COVID-19 and Russia's invasion of Ukraine have played a part in boosting the party's popularity, particularly among the working class.

He doesn't believe that all Sweden Democrat voters share the party's nationalist ideology but are rather "reacting to inflation and economic deterioration."

What do the Sweden Democrats stand for?

As for political scientist Martinsson, he defines the Sweden Democrats as "mainly an anti-immigration party with a nationalist ideology" but shies away from describing it as extreme- or radical-right.

"In economic terms, the party is more centrist and pragmatic, with a mixture of left- and right-wing proposals," Martinsson said.

Journalist Kenes, however, remains convinced that the party is a threat to democracy.

He points to a recent review indicating that 214 Sweden Democrat candidates who stood in the latest elections can be linked to right-wing extremism.

The Sweden Democrats aim for zero asylum-seekers, along with longer prison sentences and wider use of deportation. The party also has a euroskeptic stance.
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AndrewX

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Apr 7, 2020
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Boom !!!

Swedish PM concedes election defeat to far-right and right-wing bloc, announcing resignation


Sweden's center-left Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson on Wednesday conceded defeat in a weekend election while the leader of a nationalist anti-immigration party declared victory for his right-wing bloc, and announced she would resign.

Speaking at a press conference, Ms. Andersson, Social Democrats party leader, noted that it was a "narrow majority, but a majority nonetheless. "So tomorrow I will hand in my resignation as prime minister, and the responsibility for the continued process will go to the speaker," Ms. Andersson said.

Jimmie Akesson, leader of the far-right Sweden Democrats, said his party would be "a constructive and driving force in this work" of rebuilding safety in Sweden. He said it was "time to put Sweden first."

With almost all votes counted, the right-wing bloc of four parties that includes the Sweden Democrats – the country's second-largest party – appeared to have won a thin majority in parliament. Though a few votes were outstanding they were not enough to sway the final outcome.

Never before has a Swedish government relied on the support of the anti-immigration and nationalist SD, who became the big winners of the vote, by gaining more than three percentage points. With 20.6% of votes counted so far the party emerged as Sweden's second largest party behind the Social Democrats, which have dominated Swedish politics since the 1930s.

However, the post of prime minister will in all likelihood go to the leader of the Moderate Party, Ulf Kristersson, as SD leader Jimmie Akesson is unable to unite all four parties to head the government. "I now begin the work of forming a new and strong government," Mr. Kristersson said in a video posted to Facebook.

Read more Subscribers only Sweden elections: Far right surges to become country's second-strongest force
Ms. Andersson became Sweden’s first female prime minister last year and led the country in its historic bid to join NATO following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

The Sweden Democrats party was long shunned by Swedes because of its roots in the neo-Nazi movement. In recent years it has moved into the mainstream by expelling extremists and gained support with a tough stance on crime and immigration amid a rise in shootings and other gang violence.

The result leaves the right-wing bloc with 176 seats in the 349-parliament, the Riksdag, and Ms. Andersson's center-left bloc with 173 seats. In such a situation, a few disgruntled MPs could end up flipping the balance of power.

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"The four right-wing parties appear to have received just under 50% of the votes in the election, and in the Riksdag, they have gained one or two mandates. A narrow majority, but it is a majority," Ms. Andersson said.


 

oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
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Democracy ain't so fun after all considering where this right-wing
rising is taking place. It will be more fun if Sweden's neighbours
are to follow suit.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
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Democracy ain't so fun after all considering where this right-wing
rising is taking place. It will be more fun if Sweden's neighbours
are to follow suit.
Climate change caused by the oil & gas industry might add 146 million migrants just from Africa this year.
And here you are making fun of Sweden having to deal with your problems?

 

AndrewX

Well-known member
Apr 7, 2020
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Democracy ain't so fun after all considering where this right-wing
rising is taking place. It will be more fun if Sweden's neighbours
are to follow suit.
This is very big. There is so much the Swedes can take before turning to the right and changing immigration policies. Sweden was known as the rape capital of the world and Malmo the middle eastern capital of Sweden had 150 grenade and explosions in 2015, it hasn't stopped. . I'm sure other countries will follow.
 

basketcase

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Dec 29, 2005
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Democracy ain't so fun after all considering where this right-wing
rising is taking place. It will be more fun if Sweden's neighbours
are to follow suit.
Democracy is often not 'fun' and it is sad that you are gloating over extreme nationalists are taking advantage of people's anger by promoting hatred.
 

oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
13,564
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Ghawar
Democracy is for people to vote in those who listen to their voices
to be their leaders. It is not meant to help voters to identify the most
important issues that need to be addressed. Nor is it meant to police
the morals of politicians. For instance if an issue as pressing as climate
change in Europe has become irrelevant to voters politicians would
not have the moral obligation to remind voters perils of negligence
of the climate emergency. If people want stricter immigration quota
it should come as no surprise that concern over the possible consequence
of the incitement of hatred against immigrants is secondary to the
promotion of anti-immigration policy to win votes.
 

oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
13,564
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Ghawar
Why the far-right were the biggest winners and four other takeaways

David Mac Dougall
16/09/2022

When all the votes were counted the Sweden Democrats might not have been the biggest party in this week's election, but there's no doubt they were the biggest winners.

From early beginnings as a neo-Nazi group to getting their first MPs into the Riksdag only 12 years ago; to supplanting the traditional conservative opposition and garnering more than 20% of the vote this year, the rise of the far-right anti-immigrant party has been meteoric.

The Sweden Democrats may not end up a formal part of the right-wing coalition which has a slim majority in the Swedish parliament, but they will certainly loom large behind the scenes, in the corridors of power, and where government ministries are driven by some of their policies.


1. So what was the secret to the Sweden Democrats' success?

The Sweden Democrats did not have a flash-in-the-pan win at this week's election. They've had a slow and steady build-up of support over the last decade and seen the success of similar anti-immigrant parties in Finland and Denmark getting into government, paving the way for them.

What they have managed to do successfully is link up a recent crime wave involving some shootings and gang violence, with the idea that it's all the fault of foreigners.

Indeed, on the campaign trail, senior Sweden Democrat politicians were openly blaming Islam for many of Sweden's social and economic problems.

They've pivoted away from being openly critical of foreigners to a more nuanced message that says people of different cultures can't live in the same country: and it's a message which has been heard loud and clear by voters.


Whether in government or as the power behind the throne, the Sweden Democrats "will drive a really hard bargain," said Pontus Odmalm, a Swede who lectures in politics at the University of Edinburgh.

Sweden Democrats leader Jimmie Åkesson has made it crystal clear that immigration is the top priority his party wants to see tackled by the next government.

"They will drive a really hard bargain. We might see what happened in Denmark where the government made a deal with the Danish People's Party on budget and immigration. But it's going to be an extremely difficult post-election situation." he told Euronews.

In government, or out of government, there will be a coalition deal of some kind made between the Sweden Democrats and the other parties in the next government, led by the Moderates' Ulf Kristersson.

"I think what we have to see if Sweden Democrats advisers are coming into government departments and if they set limits on what civil servants can do," said Dominic Hinde, an experienced foreign journalist in Sweden who lectures at the University of Glasgow in Scotland.

"Anybody who is directly under the mandate of the state could find they are called to do things they are not entirely comfortable with, and that is uncharted territory.

"Usually there is a huge respect among ministers and politicians for the neutrality of advice the civil service gives, but now they will be expecting more of a confrontation on policy issues," Hinde told Euronews.

2. Sweden Democrats certainly aren't universally popular in Sweden

On a national level, the Sweden Democrats looked to have performed really well. But a closer inspection of some voting results showed they are more popular in some parts of Sweden than others.

Their heartland is in the south of the country, in areas that might have previously been strongholds for the Social Democrats.

In the capital, Stockholm, the Sweden Democrats received just 10% of the votes, while in Gothenburg they got 14.7% of the vote.

But in the southern region of Skåne they polled almost 33% of the votes in the countryside areas. In Skane's biggest city Malmö, they got 16.4% of the vote which really highlights the importance of rural areas in southern Sweden where there are concerns about immigration and crime and where the Sweden Democrats' message is resonating strongly.

3. After election defeats come resignations

It's been a turbulent week for Sweden's first female Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson. On the campaign trail, she's considered a 'rock star' for the Social Democrats, with her image adorning countless posters and leaflets. And with a high trust factor from the public, she was a huge electoral asset to the Social Democrats.

Andersson's personal popularity, however, didn't translate into enough of a boost for her party and she handed in her resignation to the speaker of parliament the day after final polling results came out - even though her party actually gained seven seats in parliament compared to the previous election.

And she wasn't the only high-profile candidate to quit this week. The leader of the Centre Party Annie Lööf also resigned. Her party is nominally centre-right in Nordic politics terms but she was so aghast at the thought of being in power or beholden to the Sweden Democrats -- she repeatedly called them "xenophobes" on the campaign trail -- that her party would have been willing to join a left-wing bloc just to keep them out of office.

"After 11 years as party leader, I will shortly hand over the baton" Lööf wrote on Twitter.

"I do it with a straight back and a sense of pride in the impression the Center Party has made. For the climate, for the countryside and for gender equality. Because we always stood up for humanity."

The Centre Party's election gamble didn't pay off for Lööf, whose party lost seven seats and almost 2% of the vote compared with the previous election.

4. The environment was put on the back burner

The climate crisis didn't feature as strongly in this election cycle as you might imagine. Especially in the home country of Greta Thunberg, where there's even a word for 'flight shaming' people who take too many planes!

In so much as the climate was a part of the campaign it was linked to the energy price hikes, and looking at whether more nuclear power stations would be needed in Sweden.

Greta Thunberg, who made herself globally famous by sitting quietly outside parliament in Stockholm just two weeks before the 2018 general election, has lamented that climate issues were "forgotten" in this campaign.

"The climate is a big and important issue for voters, but my impression is it's not discussed on the same level at all as law and order, and the energy crisis and rising gasoline prices, that's being discussed more," said Nora Theorin from the University of Gothenburg.

"Of course in the party manifesto of the Green Party they are trying to always focus on the climate question and in debates when they are interviewed, but for some reason, this has not translated into votes," she told Euronews.

There was some good news for the Swedish Greens, however, who at one point looked like they might not get enough votes to push them above the 4% threshold to get into parliament.

They polled 5.1% nationally but had a particularly strong showing in some of the bigger cities: 10% in Stockholm, 7.9% in Gothenburg and 7.5% in Malmö.

5. Will Sweden's international image take a hit?

Around the world, Sweden has been seen as a beacon of progressive liberalism. The country of gender equality and full rights for sexual minorities. This is the land of ABBA and IKEA.

But now, how is the rest of the world supposed to look at a country where one-in-five voters cast their ballot for an openly anti-immigrant party?

The Moderates, under likely new Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson, will want to move quickly to reassure international partners that they are the sensible hand at the tiller of the Swedish state.

Of course, talk is one thing, and the next Swedish government - they take on average 18 days to form - will ultimately be judged on its actions whether the Sweden Democrats are a formal part of a coalition government with seats in cabinet, or if they are behind the scenes pulling the strings.

 
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