Author Topic: Swedish gov't loses majority as far-right surges  (Read 946 times)

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Religious Dick

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Swedish gov't loses majority as far-right surges
« on: September 19, 2010, 10:20:32 PM »

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Swedish gov't loses majority as far-right surges

By KARL RITTER, Associated Press Writer
2 hrs 19 mins ago

STOCKHOLM ? A far-right party entered the Swedish Parliament for the first time in elections Sunday, spoiling the center-right government's victory and majority, and plunging the country into political disarray, preliminary results showed.
Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt was seeking to become the first center-right leader to win re-election after serving a full term in a Scandinavian welfare nation dominated for decades by the left-wing Social Democrats.
But the Islam-bashing Sweden Democrats held the balance of power after winning 5.7 percent of the votes for 20 seats in the 349-seat legislature, according to results.
Final official results are expected later this week.
Reinfeldt's four-party coalition won 172 seats, three short of a majority, while the left-wing opposition got 157 seats.
His coalition has been boosted by popular tax cuts and healthy public finances that stand out in debt-ridden Europe.
The 45-year-old prime minister said his government would stay in office and seek support from the small opposition Green Party, to avoid having to rely on the Sweden Democrats.
"I have been clear on how we will handle this uncertain situation: We will not cooperate, or become dependent on, the Sweden Democrats," Reinfeldt said.
Green Party leader Maria Wetterstrand, who campaigned with the Social Democrats and the ex-communist Left Party, at first rejected the idea, saying she couldn't envision supporting a government "that doesn't have a climate policy."
The result suggested a hung Parliament, because both blocs have ruled out governing with the Sweden Democrats, who want sharp cuts in immigration and have called Islam Sweden's biggest foreign threat since World War II.
If Reinfeldt fails to solve the impasse he will be left with a fragile minority government that could be forced to resign if it fails to push crucial legislation through Parliament.
Sweden Democrats leader Jimmie Akesson said his party had "written political history" in the election.
"Party colleagues, we're in Parliament!" he told jubilant supporters in Stockholm.
Large waves of immigration from the Balkans, Iraq and Iran have changed the demography of the once-homogenous Scandinavian country, and one-in-seven residents are now foreign-born. The Sweden Democrats say immigration has become an economic burden that drains the welfare system.
But pre-vote surveys showed Swedish voters were more concerned about unemployment ? at 8.5 percent in July ? the economy and the environment than they were about immigration.
Siamak Shoukri, a 52-year-old electrical engineer who moved to Sweden from Iran, said he believes the financial crisis has helped foment hostility against immigrants.
"Always when there is a crisis, unemployment, mass unemployment ... they believe that foreigners have caused it," said Shoukri, who voted for the Left Party.
The Electoral Authority said 82 percent of 7.1 million eligible voters turned out for the election.
Reinfeldt's coalition ousted the Social Democrats in 2006 and kept its promises to lower taxes and trim welfare benefits. Sweden's export-driven economy is expected to grow by more than 4 percent this year while its 2010 budget gap is on track to be the smallest in the 27-nation European Union.
The Social Democrats fell to a record low of 30.8 percent in Sunday's vote, just marginally better than the 30 percent won by Reinfeldt's Moderate Party.
"This is an election without winners, and I'm saying that with a heavy heart," said Social Democrat leader Mona Sahlin. "It is up to Fredrik Reinfeldt now to show how he plans to run Sweden without letting the Sweden Democrats get a political influence."
___
Associated Press writers Malin Rising, Jona Kallgren and Louise Nordstrom contributed to this report.
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Christians4LessGvt

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Re: Swedish gov't loses majority as far-right surges
« Reply #1 on: September 19, 2010, 11:13:38 PM »
No surprise....extremist breed extremist from the other end of the spectrum
It's a ying/yang
People are tired of seeing Leftist sell their countries, their culture, their identity down the river.
So this far right reaction is a result of the years of nuttiness by the Leftist.
It's probably gonna happen here too....
The Tea Party is the just the beginning that "plays nice".
Eventually some mean bastards are probably gonna be needed to take our country back.
"Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!" - Ronald Reagan - June 12, 1987

Religious Dick

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Re: Swedish gov't loses majority as far-right surges
« Reply #2 on: September 20, 2010, 12:56:20 AM »
No surprise....extremist breed extremist from the other end of the spectrum
It's a ying/yang
People are tired of seeing Leftist sell their countries, their culture, their identity down the river.
So this far right reaction is a result of the years of nuttiness by the Leftist.
It's probably gonna happen here too....
The Tea Party is the just the beginning that "plays nice".
Eventually some mean bastards are probably gonna be needed to take our country back.


Indeed. As one wit put it, fascism is the bastard child of liberalism.
I speak of civil, social man under law, and no other.
-Sir Edmund Burke

Xavier_Onassis

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Re: Swedish gov't loses majority as far-right surges
« Reply #3 on: September 20, 2010, 09:53:05 AM »
I would not call a 5.7% of the vote or 20 seats in a Parliament with 349 seats much of a "surge".
"Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana."

sirs

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Re: Swedish gov't loses majority as far-right surges
« Reply #4 on: September 20, 2010, 04:35:30 PM »
As one wit put it, fascism is the bastard child of liberalism.

Boy, ain't that the truth, as we witness 1st hand, here in this country
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Plane

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Re: Swedish gov't loses majority as far-right surges
« Reply #5 on: September 26, 2010, 09:11:58 PM »
In Sweeden what is "far" right?

I am trying to imagine this as compared to our own spectrum.

I would bet that our right fringe is further over than theirs.