Sweden faces political impasse after
far-right election gains
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[September 10, 2018]
By Niklas Pollard and Simon Johnson
STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - Sweden faces a
political impasse after its mainstream center-left and center-right
blocs virtually tied in an election on Sunday, while the far-right -
which neither wants to deal with - made gains on a hardline
anti-immigration platform.
With nearly all votes counted on Monday, the ruling center-left Social
Democrats and Greens and their Left Party parliamentary ally had 40.6
percent of the vote, while the opposition center-right Alliance was on
40.3 percent.
That translates into a single-seat advantage in the 349-member Riksdag.
The Sweden Democrats, a party with white supremacist roots, won 17.6
percent, about 5 percentage points more than four years ago. It was the
biggest gain of any party and in line with conventional opinion polls
but fell short of the 20-30 percent their leader Jimmie Akesson had
predicted.
"Most signs pointed towards the Sweden Democrats taking over the
position as the second-biggest party in Sweden. But the expected ...
bang did not happen," the liberal Expressen daily said in an opinion
piece. "Sweden is now on steadier grounds than what we could have feared
before the election."
Many online surveys, which in the last election had gauged the Sweden
Democrats' vote better than conventional polls, had signaled they could
dethrone the Social Democrats as the nation's biggest party - a position
the center-left has held for a century.
In the end, the Sweden Democrats were beaten by Prime Minister Stefan
Lofven's Social Democrats by a 10 percentage point margin and eclipsed
also by Ulf Kristersson's Moderates, the Alliance's candidate for the
premiership.
"In some sense we're happy the Sweden Democrats didn't grow more than
they did," Liberal Party lawmaker Allan Widman told Reuters. "The bigger
they become, the more hard pressed all other parties become."
GRAPHIC - Election result https://tmsnrt.rs/2CDMT4e
SENSE OF RELIEF
The Sweden Democrats' success follows a rise in popularity of other
far-right parties in Europe amid growing anxiety over national identity,
the effects of globalization and fears over immigration boosted by
conflicts in the Middle East and Africa.
Sweden saw itself as a "humanitarian superpower" for years, but a rise
in gang violence in immigrant-dominated, socially deprived city suburbs
has also won support for the Sweden Democrats.
After the arrival of 163,000 asylum seekers in 2015 - the most in Europe
in relation to the country's population of 10 million, the government
suspended many of its liberal asylum policies.
There was a sense of relief among supporters of mainstream parties about
the far-right's less dramatic gains. That was shared in Brussels. "It is
clear that the claim that the far-right is on an inexorable roll and
will devour everything that stands in its way is false," said one EU
official, while acknowledging that there is fragmentation among parties.
Still, the Swedish election underscored a broader shift to the right in
one of Europe's most socially progressive nations.
IMPASSE
Senior figures in the mainstream parties headed into meetings on Monday
to produce a strategy for forming a government. But the process could
take weeks and possibly fail, with the Sweden Democrats vowing to sink
any cabinet that doesn't give them a say in policy.
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Swedish Foreign Minister and Social democrat Margot Wallstrom
arrives for a meeting with the Social Democrat party executive
committee at the party headquarters, in Stockholm, Sweden September
10, 2018. TT News Agency/Jonas Ekstromer via REUTERS
"We won't participate in letting through a government which doesn't
give us influence," Akesson said on local channel TV4. "On the
contrary, we will do what we can to take down any such government."
Akesson hopes his party, which wants Sweden to leave the European
Union and freeze immigration, can play a decisive role in
negotiations over forming a government, a prospect so far rejected
by all other parties.
He challenged Kristersson to choose between seeking support from the
Sweden Democrats for an Alliance government or accept four more
years of Lofven as prime minister.
Kristersson called on Lofven to resign, but also rebuffed Akesson.
"We have been completely clear during the whole election. The
Alliance will not govern or discuss how to form a government with
the Sweden Democrats," he said.
Both sides laid claim to being best placed to form a government,
although votes from Swedes living abroad are not due to be declared
until Wednesday and these could still sway the final outcome
slightly.
Yet in the same breath, leaders of both sides called for bipartisan
accommodation to avoid gridlock in parliament.
SOMETHING'S GOT TO GIVE
Sweden's center-left and center-right have ruled together only a
handful of times since the mid-1930s. Also, a 2014 accord to
neutralize the Sweden Democrats and let the biggest bloc rule proved
deeply unpopular among center-right grassroot members and rapidly
unraveled.
"Something has got to give," Umea University political scientist
Magnus Blomgren said. "Whether that's an agreement across the
political divide in some way or not, something has to be done."
A new election will be called if parliament doesn't agree on a prime
minister after four attempts.
(Additional reporting by Justyna Pawlak, Anna Ringstrom, Olof
Swahnberg, Johan Sennero, Johan Ahlander and Gabriela Baczynska;
editing by David Stamp)
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