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CHRISTIAN DEMOCRATS

Homeless need more help: Health minister

Sweden's Public Health Minister Maria Larsson has called for new measures to help those living on the streets and sharper legislation to stop children being evicted from their homes.

Homeless need more help: Health minister

Larsson, a Christian Democrat MP, wants the government to intensify work with homelessness in Sweden and contributory factors during the next term of office.

“A welfare state like Sweden should not have a homeless problem,” said Larsson while presenting a new proposal at a Christian Democrat campaign event in Jönköping, central Sweden, on Saturday.

“Forty years ago we had no homeless people on the streets,” she added.

Her suggestions include better representation by way of a national homeless coordinator whose job would be to support local authorities in developing strategies to get more people off the streets.

Larsson also proposed a sum of 50 million kronor ($6.76 million) to be earmarked towards local councils to help them set up the ‘Property First’ project.

The new initiative, recently introduced to Sweden, aims to help the homeless – often those with addiction problems – by first offering them a place to live and then organising help to address their physical and mental well-being.

Larsson stated that the method has reaped successful results in the US and gave a special mention to the cities of Malmö, Helsingborg och Stockholm for their work with the project.

She also proposes a review of legislation to make it illegal to evict children from their homes by 2012.

“For every child it’s is a catastrophe not to have a home to go to,” she said. “”That children are being evicted in our country is just completely unacceptable.”

In 2007, the government introduced a new strategy for homelessness. At that time around 1,000 children a year were affected by evictions carried out by the Swedish Enforcement Authority (Kronofogden).

Those figures are reported to have halved in the last two years but Larsson says it’s not enough.

Legislation must be clearer so local authorities have a better understanding that children cannot be evicted from their home.

Larsson also proposes better cooperation between social services and Kronofogden in order that evictions can be more easily prevented.

“This is a matter of urgency,” she said.

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LÖÖF

Baby on way for Centre Party leader in Sweden

"Two will become three", wrote Annie Lööf on Twitter on Wednesday. The leader of one of the four centre-right Alliance parties that made up the last government is expecting a baby in the autumn.

Baby on way for Centre Party leader in Sweden
Centre Party leader Annie Lööf. Photo: TT
Annie Lööf, 31, has announced that she is having a baby with her husband Carl-Johan Lööf and is set to take six months of parental leave.
 
But she has said that she will still do "certain things that party leaders do during that time" such as making a Christmas speech.
 
The Centre Party has said that Anders W. Jonsson, an MP and former doctor in his fifties, will take over most of her duties including party leadership debates.
 
In Sweden, parents are entitled to 480 days of paid parental leave and her long term partner, whom she married in 2011 is also expected to take several months off work.
 
Lööf has made no secret of her desire to become a parent.
 
In an interview with Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet in 2012 she said: "Someone asked what title I was hoping for after 2014 [an election year in Sweden] and I answered 'mum'. It would be great".
 
Lööf became MP for Jönköping County in southern Sweden when she was just 23 years old. She followed her father Hans-Göran Johansson’s footsteps into politics; he is also a Centre Party politician and is the current mayor of Värnamo Municipality. Lööf was selected to become leader of the party in 2011 and was Minister for Enterprise in the Alliance government. She has a degree in law and lives in Nacka, Stockholm, with her husband.
 
Writing about her news in more detail on Facebook, Lööf said: "It's amazing. I have been feeling good so far, so we hope it continues. Our plan is to share the parental leave."
 
Asked if her time away from her daily duties could have an impact on her party, the leader's press secretary Oscar Sundesvall told Swedish public broadcaster SVT: "Annie Lööf is perceived as very trustworthy even outside the party and she is the face of the party. It wouldn't be wrong for more [Centre Party] people to be seen by the Swedish people."
 
The Centre Party has rural roots, emerging from Sweden’s Farmers' League, which was set up more than one hundred years ago. Agricultural and environmental issues remain key concerns alongside allowing local communities to make their own decisions. More recently the party has tried to attract urban voters by promising help for small businesses.
 
Lööf is not the only party leader who is expecting. Ebba Busch Thor, 28, the new head of the Christian Democrats, the smallest party in the Alliance, is set to have a baby in May.
 
Busch Thor recently told Swedish newspaper Expressen in March that her husband, Niklas Thor, a football player for IK Sirius FK, would claim the major part of their parental leave. She said she would like to go on leave for "a shorter period" this summer. 
 
Sweden has four female party leaders in government. Anna Kinberg Batra took over from former Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt at the helm of the Moderates earlier this year and Åsa Romsen is co-spokesperson for the Greens.
 
Gudrun Schyman leads the Feminist Initiative, which just missed out on its first seat in parliament in Sweden's last general election in September 2014.