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POLITICS

Swedish word of the day: vågmästare

Today, we're looking at a word that might help you understand the current political situation a little better.

Swedish word of the day: vågmästare
Image: nito103/Depositphotos

Vågmästare is, like many of the best Swedish words, a compound noun.

Våg has two meanings: 'wave', as in the movement of the ocean but also used figuratively, and 'scales', as in the device used to weigh things. It's the second meaning we're interested in here. 

Mästare means 'master', and shares its origins with the English word.

So en vågmästare means 'the master of the scales' and in the 18th and 19th centuries, it was used very literally. Sweden at the time had many weighing houses (järnvåg) where iron (järn) was weighed and stored.

These days, neither the weighing houses nor the official role of vågmästare exist any longer. But you'll still hear the word vågmästare used, often in a political context.

Nowadays, it refers to those politicians or parties who have the power to decide the outcome of an election or vote, metaphorically tipping the scales to help one side reach a majority. It's a word that has been used in Swedish since the 1920s and can crop up a lot, since there are a lot of political parties in Sweden's parliament and a political system that favours alliances and minority governments.

When two large blocs fail to reach a majority (like in the last two elections), it's often down to a smaller party or bloc to decide which group to align with. In English, the term usually used is 'kingmaker'.

READ ALSO: Everything you need to know about the Swedish election

On Friday, four of Sweden's parties (the centre-left Social Democrats and Green Party, plus the centre-liberal Centre and Liberal parties) confirmed a government agreement, which looked like a step towards ending four months of political deadlock. But even with those four former rivals in agreement, the parties' MPs didn't have the majority needed in order for the deal to pass a parliamentary vote.

The right-wing Moderate Party and Christian Democrats were highly unlikely to support the deal, as were the far-right Sweden Democrats. The most likely way the agreement could get past parliament was for the Left Party's 28 MPs to agree not to vote it down. In other, more poetic words: the Left Party was the vågmästare. It was up to them to decide whether to tip the scales (spoiler alert: on Wednesday, the party's leader confirmed they would allow the Social Democrat-led government to go ahead).


Jonas Sjöstedt, the leader of the Left Party, who were vågmästare after the Swedish election. Photo: Jonas Ekströmer/TT

Otherwise, in recent years it's often been the far-right Sweden Democrats who have been described as vågmästare. Their emergence as the third largest bloc has left neither of the two traditional sides able to form a majority, raising the question of whether one of the main blocs would need to rely on Sweden Democrat support to govern.

Of course, it's worrying for the larger blocs if a party that only a small percentage of voters support can end up having the final say in who gets to govern. Because of this, vågmästare tends to be used in a pejorative sense, usually when the opposition party is highlighting the influence this small party will get. But it can also be used in a mere descriptive sense by political observers.

An alternative phrase with the same meaning is tungan på vågen, literally meaning 'the tongue on the scales'. 

Examples

Vänsterpartiet kan blir vågmästare i svensk politik, i stället för Sverigedemokraterna

The Left Party can become the kingmakers in Swedish politics, instead of the Sweden Democrats

Vi ser det som en fördel att vi har blivit vågmästare

We consider it an advantage that we have become the kingmakers

Do you have a favourite Swedish word you would like to nominate for our word of the day series? Get in touch by email or if you are a Member of The Local, log in to comment below.

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POLITICS

‘A group of Nazis’: Masked men attack Swedish anti-fascism meeting

Several masked men burst into a Stockholm theatre on Wednesday night and set off smoke bombs during an anti-fascism event, Swedish police and participants said.

'A group of Nazis': Masked men attack Swedish anti-fascism meeting

Around 50 people were taking part in the event at the Gubbängen theatre in a southern suburb of the Swedish capital, organised by the Left Party and the Green Party.

“Three people were taken by ambulance to hospital,” the police said on its website, adding that it had no information about the injuries suffered.

According to the Expo anti-racism magazine, which had been invited to give a presentation at the event, “a group of Nazis” came into the theatre foyer just before the event was to begin and threw smoke bombs into the hall.

“The Nazis attacked visitors using physical violence… (and) vandalised the premises before throwing a type of smoke bomb that filled the entrance hall with smoke,” Expo wrote on its website.

“It’s terrible that a meeting organised by the left-wing party has been attacked,” said Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson, quoted by the TT news agency.

“This type of hateful behaviour has no place in our free and open society,” he said, adding that he had contacted the party’s leader to express his “deepest support”.

All of Sweden’s political parties denounced the assault as an “attack on democracy”, TT said.

Left Party leader Nooshi Dadgostar told public broadcaster SVT that an “open event, for equality among individuals” was “violently attacked by those who seemed to be Nazis”.

She also called on “all political forces” to fight the “far right that threatens our democracy”.

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