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SWEDEN DEMOCRATS

What have the Sweden Democrats learned from other Nordic far-right parties?

Their sister parties in Norway and Finland joined the main centre-right party in coalition. The one in Denmark stayed outside. What have the Sweden Democrats learned from their Nordic counterparts?

What have the Sweden Democrats learned from other Nordic far-right parties?
Danish People's Party leader Kristian Thulesen Dahl reacts to the Danish 2015 election result. Photo: Linda Johansen/Polfoto

When Jimmie Åkesson danced jubilantly onto the stage at the Sweden Democrats’ election vigil, he made one thing very clear in his speech. The Sweden Democrats’ ambition was to join Sweden’s next government, with ministerial posts, officials in the government offices, and more.

“If there’s going to be a new government we are going to have a central position,” he said. “Our ambition is to be part of the government.” 

The party’s general secretary, Richard Jomshof, has since repeated again and again that ministerial posts are absolutely part of ongoing talks with the Moderate, Christian Democrat and Liberal Parties. 

His party, he says, has learned from the experience of sister parties in the Nordic countries.

So what are these lessons, and how will they affect the coming negotiations and the Sweden Democrats’ behaviour over the next four years. 

If you stay out of government, your voters will punish you

When the Danish People’s Party became the second biggest party in Denmark, with 21 percent of the vote, and chose not to join the Liberals in government, it marked the start of a decline that has since led to total annihilation, with the party having just 2 percent of the vote in some recent polls. 

“We should have been in the government of 2015,” Kristian Thulesen Dahl, the party’s then leader, rued back in 2019. “I believe that a party with such a large mandate from the people should, in the eyes of the voters, end up as a government party.” 

According to Jens Peter Frølund Thomsen, an expert on anti-immigration parties at Aarhus University, the party had in 2015 been too “afraid of the electoral costs involved in going into government”, and had not felt them to be necessary. 

“It thought that it had a golden opportunity to exert very considerable influence as the biggest party of the right without shouldering the burden of office and having to defend decisions when the going gets rough” agrees Nicholas Aylott, Associate Professor in Politics at Stockholm’s Södertörn University. “They thought that was the that was like the dream situation for a party at that time.” 

But in the end, it turned out to be a mistake.  “A lot of activists in the party were really unhappy about the decision to stay out of the cabinet, and thought that was a major failure, and I agree with them,” Thomsen says. 

“Voters didn’t reward them for shirking responsibility in that way,” Aylott agrees. 

The collapse of the Danish People’s Party will not only be top of mind for the Sweden Democrats as they enter negotiations with the Moderates. They will want the Moderates to know it is top of mind.  

“What I suspect Jomshof is doing now is upping the ante a little bit,” Aylott says. “He’s signalling to the other parties of the right in Sweden that ‘I know my modern Danish history’, and ‘I know that it is potentially perilous for a party like the Sweden Democrats not to take the responsibility when the opportunity arises’.”

“Therefore, we want ministerial positions,” he predicts the argument will go. “And if we’re not going to get them, if we’re going to risk our own future, then we need a bloody good payoff.” 

If you do join government, limit your compromises

The Finns Party, Finland’s far-right party, joined the coalition which took power in 2015 after receiving a massive 17.7 percent of the votes. The party’s leader and co-founder, Timo Soini, was then appointed Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister. 

But almost as soon as he took over the foreign ministry, he had to back a third European Union bailout of the Greek economy. This was a total reverse in stance for a party that had built its popularity in the years leading up to the election on vociferously campaigning against the first two bailouts. The party also didn’t force the government it was a part of to tighten immigration rules during the 2015 refugee crisis. 

The Norwegian Progress Party, in contrast, managed to preside over a dramatic tightening of Norwegian immigration policy shortly after taking office, with its current leader Sylvi Listhaug becoming Norway’s first Minister of Immigration and Integration in December 2016.

In the first four months of 2016, asylum applications to Norway dropped to the lowest level since 1993, helping Listhaug to a sky-high approvals rating. 

You need a disciplined party organisation to be in power

With Timo Soini focused on being Foreign Minister, The Finns elected a new leader, Jussi Halla-aho, a fervent Islamophobe, who gave it a much more extreme position on migration position. Soini and other, more moderate members, then left the party to form the Blue Reform party. 

“In general, these parties are quite vulnerable when they get into power, because the rules are different,” Thomsen said. “They have to be responsible, and they have to work within certain levels of constraints.”

“That may cause unrest and internal conflicts in the party, because these parties attract a lot a quite extreme people, and if you get too pragmatic, then you may have a lot of trouble. These parties have to be very, centralised, and governed by very strong leaders with very tough discipline.” 

Norway’s Progress Party is the success story here.

It entered a coalition with the Norwegian Conservative Party in 2013 after securing 16 percent of the vote, and stayed in government for the best part of two terms, after winning 15 percent of the vote in 2017. 

“The key thing was was discipline,” says Nicholas Aylott, Associate Professor in Politics at Stockholm’s Södertörn University. “The party was sufficiently capable of being led, and it did not fragment into different factions, with some hating being in government and wanting to get out and reestablish their status as a vehicle for protest.” 

Thomsen puts this down to the party’s history. “They were disintegrating because of internal conflict in the 1970s so they created a very efficient, cohesive organisation, and that was really, really important when they joined the cabinet, because that always causes a lot of trouble.” 

The party also perfected a sort of double role, with some key party figures staying out of government, where they had a sort of licence to campaign in a populist way. 

The Danish People’s Party never entered government, but Aylott argues that it too developed a formidable organisation under its previous leader Pia Kjærsgaard, who had left the Danish Progress Party after growing frustrated at its chaotic lack of discipline. 

Choose your ministries carefully 

A big mistake in the Finnish case was for the party leader, Timo Soini, to take a ministry that did not bring power over the issues party members were most concerned about, Thomsen argues. 

“Being foreign minister is completely irrelevant for these parties,” he said. “For him it was very good and very interesting, of course, but it was really bad for the party. These parties should have a minister in a post that is really important for the party’s identity. Political values rather than economics, that’s the ball game. Immigration in particular, or law and order.” 

The Progress Party’s decision to lead Norway’s finance ministry makes more sense, given the fact that it had a background as a party protesting against high taxes. But it also secured immigration. 

Anyway, the party is in some ways a special case. 

“Some experts will say that the Progress Party is not a true radical right party,” Thomsen says. “They are very much focused on economic matters and lower taxes. They are focused on restricting immigration but it doesn’t necessarily have the same priority.” 

Will theatrics be enough for the Sweden Democrats’ voters? 

When the Sweden Democrats go into negotiations with Moderate Party leader Ulf Kristersson over the coming week (or weeks), and end up accepting not entering the ruling coalition, it will be important that their voters know this was not by choice, as it was for the Danish People’s Party. 

This may mean they have create some sort of drama, to make this absolutely clear to their supporters. This could be a walk out in the negotiations, or perhaps even for the party to vote down Ulf Kristersson as Prime Minister in the first of the four parliamentary votes allowed for a prime minister before a new election has to called.

“It’s particularly challenging in their case, because they are balancing a number of different priorities,” Aylott argues. “What they want, of course, is, maximum influence, and that could well be achieved by being in government, but this is problematic for the other parties, so they need to signal that they’re doing their very best”

“On the other hand, they’re also interested in building up a reputation as a serious party of government. If they flounce out too quickly, this could reduce the chance that the other parties of the right deal with them in an equitable way in the foreseeable future.”

“They have to balance, on the one hand, not being taken for granted, not having their support just assumed, with on the other hand, not playing up too much, so they are seen as unpredictable and unreliable.” 

Aylott predicts that the party will in the ongoing talks, and then over the coming four years, carry out a balancing act, at times being cooperative, at times more obstructive and difficult. 

We shall soon see which stance they take first. 

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POLITICS IN SWEDEN

OPINION: Is Sweden complacent about social media influence of the radical-right?

With the think tank linked to the Sweden Democrats openly recruiting the next generation of far-right social media 'influencers', why is Sweden so complacent about moves to shift public opinion to the radical right, asks The Local's Nordic editor Richard Orange.

OPINION: Is Sweden complacent about social media influence of the radical-right?

The radical right in Sweden is at least open about what it’s trying to do.

The homepage of Oikos, the think tank set up by Mattias Karlsson, the former right-hand man of Jimmie Åkesson, leader of the Sweden Democrats, is currently recruiting the first 15 of “a new generation” of “conservative” online propagandists. 

The think tank – whose controlling foundation has been criticised for refusing to reveal the true origin of 5 million kronor in funding – this week launched its new Illustra Academy, which aims to train an army of young, far-right “creators” to help win over minds on YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok. 

Successful applicants, it promises, will get the chance “to meet leading actors in social media and digital political influencing”.

They will get “mentorship from established political influencers”, build “valuable contacts with influencers, digital opinion-makers, creatives, politicians and possible future employers”, and meet “businesses, political organisations, communications agencies and media actors”. 

This programme is being set up by Andreas Palmlöv, one of the many top Sweden Democrats who went to the US after Donald Trump was elected president to work for an increasingly radicalised Republican Party, serving as an intern for the former Speaker of Congress Kevin McCarthy.

After his return to Sweden, Palmlöv was photographed meeting Gregg Keller, a US lobbyist he says he met through the Leadership Institute, an organisation backed by a who’s who of US billionaire donors which has over the past ten years spent 8 million kronor training up young “conservatives” in Europe.

Karlsson, Åkesson’s former right-hand man, has even closer links to the US, holding at least one meeting with Steve Bannon, Trump’s former strategist, and attending the wedding of the pro-Trump US conservative media profile Candace Owens in 2019.   

As a British citizen, I’m perhaps overly sensitive about the influence of conservative, libertarian donors and their think tanks, and of the efforts to use social media to push public opinion towards the radical right. 

Vote Leave, which led the campaign for the UK to leave the European Union, started its life at 55 Tufton Street, the townhouse near the UK Parliament where the country’s most powerful “dark money” think tanks are based, while Matthew Elliot, its chief executive, was a Tufton Street veteran. 

Since the UK left the EU, the ruling Conservative Party has been increasingly captured by these think tanks and their wealthy backers.   

Ministers, former ministers and Conservative MPs now happily speak alongside radical right figures at lavish conferences like the National Conservatism UK conference part-funded by Christian pro-Trump US foundations, or the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship conference part-funded by Paul Marshall and Christopher Chandler, the two billionaires who are the most open and prominent funders of attempts to shift the UK to the radical, libertarian right. 

Conservative MPs and former ministers have over the past two years been paid a total of £600,000 (8 million kronor) to appear on GB News, the Fox News clone jointly owned by Marshall and Chandler.

The Legatum Institute, Chandler’s own think tank, pretty much dictated the UK’s Brexit policy while Boris Johnson was prime minister, while during Liz Truss’s brief premiership, the Tufton Street think tanks supplied much of her team.

When her attempt to drive through their radical libertarian economic programme blew up spectacularly, she was forced to resign. But they haven’t given up, with Truss returning in February with the new Popular Conservatism group. 

I had always believed that the UK politics was immune to US levels of big donor influence, that the Conservative Party could never go the way of the Republican Party in the US, and it turns out I was wrong. 

So is that same naivety playing out in Sweden? 

The Oikos think tank has already started hosting international conservative conferences along the lines of ARC, with a conference at the Sundbyholms Slott castle outside Eskilstuna last year. 

When Social Democrat opposition leader Magdalena Andersson raised questions earlier this year about the funding of Henrik Jönsson, a popular YouTube debater, she was sharply criticised by commentators of both left and right for seeking to smear a critic without providing evidence

But in the US, there are billionaire-funded ‘educational’ YouTube channels like PragerU that follow a very similar format to Jönsson’s. Jönsson’s videos reliably follow the same talking points, questioning whether global warming is really causing extreme weather, spread disinformation about wind farms, call for Sweden’s public broadcasters to be abolished, and claim migrants have trashed the economy. 

And when a donor last year asked Gunnar Strömmer, now Sweden’s Justice Minister, how to give 350,000 kronor to the Moderates without having to identify himself under party financing laws, in part of a sting by TV4’s Kalla Fakta programme, Strömmer advised him to give it directly to right-wing “opinion-makers”, meaning, presumably, people like Jönsson. 

Despite the uproar, Jönsson has never explicitly denied receiving funding from outside organisations, only that such funding does not influence his output. 

“I am quite open about the fact that I willingly take money from all decent organisations and private individuals,” he told the Dagens ETC newspaper, while declining to give any further details. “But no one controls what I say,” he added. 

He has admitted that the website for his Energiupproret campaign, which blamed green policy and the shutdown of nuclear power stations for high power prices in the run-up to the 2022 election, was built by Näringslivets Mediaservice, a right wing social media outfit the precise funding of which was always unclear, although it was linked to Stiftelsen Svenskt Näringsliv, a foundation set up partly by the Confederation of Swedish Industry. 

The founders of Oikos’ new influencer education programme would probably argue that nothing is stopping the political left and centre from raising funds to train up young social media influencers in exactly the same way. 

Left-wing parties are not above taking donations. Approached by the same donor as part of the Kalla Fakta undercover report, representatives of the centre-left Social Democrats – as well as the Christian Democrats, Liberals, and Sweden Democrats on the right – also recommended ways around party finance laws.

But do we really want the UK or Sweden to follow the path the US has taken in recent decades, where a handful of billionaires with radical right opinions have aggressively pumped money into think tanks and media outfits and so succeeded in pushing one of the main parties towards previously fringe political opinions? 

It didn’t need to be this way.

When Sweden was developing its new party financing laws back in 2016, experts warned the then government must not to allow the identity of donors to be hidden behind foundations, the key method used by so-called dark money in the US, but the loophole was left open by the law.

It’s not just Oikos, which is funded by an opaque foundation, Insamlingsstiftelsen för Svensk Konservatism (The Fundraising Foundation for Swedish Conservatism), which uses this loophole. 

When caught in the sting by the Kalla Fakta programme, a Social Democrat also suggested that the donor set up a foundation to hide their identity. 

It may be that money from US billionaires, big companies, or indeed from other states, is not yet being spent in Sweden in a way that can alter the political landscape, but because neither think tanks nor influencers need to give much information about who funds them, it’s impossible to know. 

In the UK, the danger may soon be averted. No one seems to take the new outfit fronted by Liz Truss too seriously, and the general election later this year should offer the chance to clean up the country’s politics.  

Nonetheless, I feel like I’ve come very close to losing my original homeland to the kind of political developments seen in the US. I don’t want to lose my adopted country too.

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