Categories: Canada

European elections a setback for Sweden’s populist party


COPENHAGEN, Denmark –


The elections in Sweden to the European Parliament marked the first electoral setback for the Swedish populist party with far-right roots that grabbed more than 13 per cent of the votes but came fourth, according to preliminary figures Monday. That made Sweden one of the few countries in Europe where the far-right is in retreat.


The Sweden Democrats — the Scandinavian country’s second largest group in the Swedish parliament — grabbed 13.2  per cent of the votes, down 2.2 per cent, and would keep their three seats in the EP assembly, according to preliminary figures.


They came in behind the opposition Social Democrats, Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson’s conservatives Moderates and the Greens, which made some of the largest gains Sunday in the EU election for Sweden’s 21 seats. The Social Democrats grabbed nearly one-fourth of the votes and would get five seats while the Moderates would get four and the Greens three.


The poor showing by the Sweden Democrats was “the election night’s greatest sensation,” said Mats Knutson, the political analyst with Swedish broadcaster SVT.


He said the reasons for the poor showing could be that the party faced a storm of criticism after a television station had alleged that it had been operating fake social media accounts, badmouthing political opponents and allies, spreading doctored videos and posting racist remarks. Knutson also noted that the migration issue wasn’t particularly important to voters this time.


Christine Nissen, an analyst with the Copenhagen-based think tank Europa, said that migration wasn’t the top issue in northern Europe in contrast to southern Europe where “issues such as migration are important for the voters there.”


The Sweden Democrats, who today support membership in the 27-member bloc, have toned down their rhetoric and expelled openly racist members. Since then, they have grown from a marginal movement with less than two per cent support to becoming the country’s second-biggest party.


In the 2022 parliament elections, the Sweden Democrats, who won nearly 21 per cent support — up from 17.5 per cent four years ago — gained on the rising fears of crime in largely immigrant neighbourhoods in segregated districts that are home to large numbers of migrants who have failed to integrate into Swedish society.


The party which maintains a hard line on immigration, supports Sweden’s three-party center-right government in the 349-member Riksdag, but is not part of it. Kristersson’s government has been moving toward a tougher stance on criminal gangs by increasing prison sentences for gang members and introducing stop-and-frisk zones for police to crack down on crime.



Source link

admin2

Share
Published by
admin2

Recent Posts

B.C.’s expanded chronic offender initiative welcomed but concerns raised – Okanagan

A new provincial initiative aimed at reducing repeat property crime and social disorder is drawing…

2 hours ago

Biotech ETFs Gain Momentum via AI Drug Discovery & Surging M&A

The biotechnology sector has broken out of its multiyear bear market. As macroeconomic headwinds moderate…

4 hours ago

Trump claims US recouped Venezuela war costs 28 times over | Donald Trump

NewsFeedUS President Donald Trump said the military operation in Venezuela lasted ‘exactly 48 minutes’ and…

5 hours ago

Crypto Lobby Pushes Congress To Keep Staking And Mining Tax

Trusted Editorial content, reviewed by leading industry experts and seasoned editors. Ad Disclosure TL;DR …

5 hours ago

Raptors select Graves 19th overall in NBA Draft

By The Canadian Press The Canadian Press Posted June 23, 2026 10:23 pm 1 min…

5 hours ago

Sunny skies return to central Alberta but flooding continues

Descrease article font size Increase article font size Tuesday brought sunshine and blue skies for…

8 hours ago