Berliner Boersenzeitung - Sweden's right-wing in talks to form govt with far-right

EUR -
AED 4.056448
AFN 75.649083
ALL 98.676574
AMD 427.596069
ANG 1.989611
AOA 1054.137255
ARS 1071.539659
AUD 1.603733
AWG 1.990657
AZN 1.893148
BAM 1.951006
BBD 2.228953
BDT 131.925847
BGN 1.953468
BHD 0.416327
BIF 3194.437749
BMD 1.104386
BND 1.422592
BOB 7.628016
BRL 6.013052
BSD 1.103953
BTN 92.723233
BWP 14.553779
BYN 3.61279
BYR 21645.97403
BZD 2.225162
CAD 1.490679
CDF 3169.041998
CHF 0.938579
CLF 0.03648
CLP 1006.592838
CNY 7.772894
CNH 7.77255
COP 4621.85721
CRC 570.393331
CUC 1.104386
CUP 29.26624
CVE 110.714548
CZK 25.330094
DJF 196.271466
DKK 7.459551
DOP 66.870123
DZD 146.749713
EGP 53.416959
ERN 16.565796
ETB 133.516832
FJD 2.422527
FKP 0.841055
GBP 0.832249
GEL 3.009468
GGP 0.841055
GHS 17.505032
GIP 0.841055
GMD 77.307359
GNF 9536.919864
GTQ 8.534031
GYD 230.855453
HKD 8.576571
HNL 27.488072
HRK 7.508735
HTG 145.562341
HUF 400.028093
IDR 16882.755357
ILS 4.180445
IMP 0.841055
INR 92.717439
IQD 1446.746223
IRR 46494.668932
ISK 149.511482
JEP 0.841055
JMD 174.206439
JOD 0.782675
JPY 161.509857
KES 142.466392
KGS 93.207288
KHR 4486.565165
KMF 491.396563
KPW 993.947161
KRW 1462.738186
KWD 0.337799
KYD 0.919911
KZT 533.422431
LAK 24376.33278
LBP 98953.023892
LKR 325.66686
LRD 214.002487
LSL 19.205036
LTL 3.260966
LVL 0.668032
LYD 5.22925
MAD 10.774944
MDL 19.312934
MGA 5019.436909
MKD 61.457047
MMK 3587.004045
MNT 3752.70504
MOP 8.828029
MRU 43.91592
MUR 51.077996
MVR 16.963323
MWK 1916.110321
MXN 21.461133
MYR 4.609157
MZN 70.547929
NAD 19.205408
NGN 1845.142757
NIO 40.586343
NOK 11.684905
NPR 148.356773
NZD 1.762274
OMR 0.42519
PAB 1.103953
PEN 4.106657
PGK 4.331128
PHP 62.090256
PKR 306.685571
PLN 4.293689
PYG 8601.592567
QAR 4.021126
RON 4.97581
RSD 117.021855
RUB 104.806238
RWF 1472.699305
SAR 4.145129
SBD 9.158195
SCR 14.634791
SDG 664.287566
SEK 11.334787
SGD 1.427176
SHP 0.841055
SLE 25.232251
SLL 23158.425568
SOS 630.604526
SRD 34.200605
STD 22858.569356
SVC 9.658961
SYP 2774.803967
SZL 19.072898
THB 36.3452
TJS 11.735166
TMT 3.865353
TND 3.365083
TOP 2.586585
TRY 37.777366
TTD 7.487535
TWD 35.293431
TZS 3009.452752
UAH 45.560211
UGX 4054.908244
USD 1.104386
UYU 45.987006
UZS 14075.405418
VEF 4000697.861428
VES 40.720566
VND 27239.691299
VUV 131.114976
WST 3.08948
XAF 654.328523
XAG 0.034845
XAU 0.000416
XCD 2.984659
XDR 0.814691
XOF 651.035178
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.455534
ZAR 19.180216
ZMK 9940.804463
ZMW 28.895087
ZWL 355.61198
  • RBGPF

    -1.3000

    59.5

    -2.18%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    6.9

    -0.43%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    24.78

    +0.04%

  • GSK

    -0.8500

    39.45

    -2.15%

  • VOD

    -0.2100

    9.74

    -2.16%

  • NGG

    -1.2700

    68.78

    -1.85%

  • RIO

    -0.3400

    70.82

    -0.48%

  • RELX

    -0.0500

    47.29

    -0.11%

  • AZN

    0.9100

    79.58

    +1.14%

  • BTI

    -0.4800

    35.97

    -1.33%

  • SCS

    -0.3300

    12.87

    -2.56%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    24.93

    -0.04%

  • BCC

    -1.8600

    139.53

    -1.33%

  • JRI

    -0.1500

    13.38

    -1.12%

  • BP

    0.2800

    32.37

    +0.86%

  • BCE

    -0.3900

    34.44

    -1.13%

Sweden's right-wing in talks to form govt with far-right

Sweden's right-wing in talks to form govt with far-right

Sweden's incoming leader got to work Thursday on the thorny task of building a government supported for the first time by the far-right, a day after securing a slim election victory.

Text size:

Conservative Moderates chief Ulf Kristersson was expected to be formally tasked sometime next week with forming a government after Social Democratic Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson on Thursday tendered her resignation.

While the far-right Sweden Democrats became the biggest party on the right with 20 percent of votes, observers said it was unlikely the anti-immigration and nationalist party would be given cabinet seats due to divisions in the right-wing bloc.

The small Liberal party has said it would withdraw its support for Kristersson -- which would leave him without a majority -- if he includes the far-right in the government.

With 176 seats -- 73 of them going to the far-right Sweden Democrats -- the four-party coalition will have a slim majority over Andersson's left bloc, which won 173.

The narrow majority leaves the right-wing bloc fragile, with the four parties fiercely opposed on a number of issues, especially the Liberals and Sweden Democrats.

A few disgruntled MPs could end up flipping the balance of power in parliament.

The bloc is at odds over international aid, unemployment benefits, asylum laws and legal reforms to staunch a wave of gang shootings and bombings that have rocked Sweden in recent years.

"This is a difficult parliamentary situation," Gothenburg University political scientist Mikael Gilljam told AFP.

Sweden Democrats leader Jimmie Akesson said on election night that obtaining cabinet posts was the party's "goal", but he has also made it clear that he was ready to present a long list of demands in exchange for the party's informal support outside government.

The party would in such case be able to heavily influence policy without being held accountable, with some analysts suggesting that was actually the far-right's preferred scenario.

- 'Make Sweden great again' -

Speaker of parliament Andreas Norlen said Thursday he would summon party leaders for talks next week before assigning Kristersson the task of building a government, opening a period of formal negotiations.

But Kristersson, 58, has already rolled up his sleeves and held meetings with the leaders of the Christian Democrats, Sweden Democrats and Liberals.

"I now begin the work of forming a new and strong government," Kristersson said on Wednesday evening in a post on Facebook after final vote counting gave his side the win.

"Now we will restore order in Sweden!"

The post of prime minister usually goes to the biggest party in a bloc, but it is expected to go to Kristersson as Sweden Democrats leader Akesson is unable to unite all four parties to head the government.

Never before has a Swedish government relied on the support of the far-right.

The Sweden Democrats rose up out of neo-Nazi groups and the "Keep Sweden Swedish" movement in the early 1990s, entering parliament in 2010 with 5.7 percent of votes.

Long shunned by other parties, they have registered strong growth in each subsequent election, and its hardline stance on crime and integration set the tone in this year's vote.

Kristersson, a former gymnast, led a major U-turn for his party when he initiated exploratory talks in 2019 with the Sweden Democrats and then deepened their cooperation.

The Christian Democrats, and to a lesser extent the Liberals, later followed suit.

In a post to Facebook on Wednesday, the 43-year-old populist leader Akesson thanked "friends of Sweden" around the country, and noted that negotiating a new government was "a process that will take the time it needs".

"Now the work begins of making Sweden great again," he said.

The rise of the far-right has divided parties and voters alike.

 

"It's scary, it's strange... We're seeing an idiocracy winning more and more ground," 39-year-old art curator Anna Senno said.

(P.Werner--BBZ)