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POLITICS

Lööf says no to Löfven, socialism, and arrogance

Friday's Social Democrat pre-election flirt with the Liberals was less ideologically queer than an invite to the libertarian and "union-busting" Centre Party, observers told The Local on Friday.

Lööf says no to Löfven, socialism, and arrogance
Social Democrat leader Stefan Löfven and Centre Party leader Annie Lööf. Files: TT

The right-of-centre government coalition has been far from alone in awaiting Social Democrat input on how exactly the opposition intends to govern Sweden next year if elections results end up in their favour. The answer finally came in the shape of an op-ed in Friday’s Dagens Nyheter newspaper, in which party leader Stefan Löfven said he would rule the land with almost anyone, apart from the Sweden Democrats, and reached out a particularly welcoming hand to the Centre Party and the Liberals (Folkpartiet).

Reactions varied. Liberal leader Jan Björklund called it “embarrassing”, which was to be expected, political science senior lecturer Nick Aylott at Södertörn University College told The Local.

“He has to say that. The four coalition parties have committed themselves so strongly to this alliance that they would look untrustworthy if they suddenly ditched it before the elections,” Aylott said. “They would look shifty and unreliable and opportunistic, which would be highly unlikely to bring them any electoral reward.”

What is known is that the four-party conservative coalition has begun slipping in the opinion polls, after riding high on the Social Democrat’s period of extreme turbulence between the 2010 election and the appointment in 2012 of metal union heavyweight Löfven to the party chair.

The last opinion poll by state agency Statistics Sweden was published in June this year, looking back at the spring.

“If a parliamentary election were to be held in May (2013) then the government parties would receive 40.7 percent of the votes. The Social Democrats, the Left Party and the Green Party would together receive 50.5 percent,” the statisticians summarized.

Whatever happens, the Social Democrats cannot count on a majority of the votes, forcing them to cooperate, although the cross-bloc flirt repulsed some on Friday. While many observers said the Social Democrats at least had socially liberal attitudes in common with the Liberals, the outstretched hand to the Centre Party was quickly slapped away.

Centre Party leader Annie Lööf quickly tweeted. “There are three things I really don’t like: 1) socialism 2) arrogance 3) men who don’t understand a no. I say no to the Social Democrats.”

Leftwing political commentator Eric Rosén said that while the Centre Party and the Social Democrats had made relatively easy bedfellows for a time in the 1990s, the subsequent leader Maud Olofsson had “aggressively” distanced herself from then socialist head honcho Göran Persson. If she turned the party away from their workers party buddies, Annie Lööf has hardcore hit the gas pedal, he said.

“I think the Social Democrats hope they can work with the Centre Party, but I think it’s a miscalculation,” Rosén told The Local. “The Centre Party is fuelled by hatred of the trade unions (facket), they deride it with slogans like ‘Fuck Facket Forever’.”

Rosén further said that the Centre Party’s stated support of labour migration was viewed by many in leftwing quarters as a way to pry power out of the hands of the Swedish trade unions, in effect setting sail to structural wage dumping. The Liberals were not free of criticism in that area either, however.

“The Liberals have worrying attitudes to work security laws and lowered starting wages,” Rosén told The Local.

At Södertörn Unviersity College south of Stockholm, meanwhile, Nick Aylott said Löfven’s invite made perfect sense given the party’s disastrous 2010 alliance with the Left Party, which “still scares” a lot of Sweden’s middle-class voters.

“Löfven doesn’t have much choice – there is no enthusiasm for repeating (former leader Mona) Sahlin’s failed strategy,” Aylott told The Local.

But what do Löfven’s party colleagues think of Friday’s op-ed?

“The Social Democrats is still a very divided party. For example on the question of private companies making profits on outsourced public services, the party is extremely divided.”

The minority Left Party has long been an outspoken critic of profit-making in state-funded welfare, but this still did not make them a strategic ally to the Social Democrats, Aylott argued, as far too many Swedish voters see them as far too left.

The real treat in store for politics buffs, Aylott underlined, was the wrangling set to take place after the September 2014 elections. While Rosén, who is editor-in-chief of leftwing opinion site Politism.se, said Löfven was unlikely to give minister posts to anyone except their main allies the Greens, Aylott said predictions were null and void until the dice are cast.

“It will be a totally different game once the elections are out of the way,” he told The Local.

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POLITICS

Sweden Democrats promise ‘softer tone’ after troll factory sparks right-wing rift

The Sweden Democrats on Thursday continued to hit back at a TV4 documentary that revealed a troll factory run by the far-right party, but promised to adopt a softer tone in social media when posting about its government allies in the future.

Sweden Democrats promise 'softer tone' after troll factory sparks right-wing rift

The announcement came after Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson sharply criticised Sweden Democrat leader Jimmie Åkesson, after the latter referred to the documentary as a “gigantic domestic influence operation” by the “collective left-liberal establishment”.

“It’s a dreadful Americanisation of politics,” Kristersson told the TT news agency, presumably referring to the similarities between former US President Donald Trump and the six-minute video posted by Åkesson in which he launched a verbal attack on Swedish journalists.

The documentary, in which a reporter working for TV4’s Kalla Fakta programme goes undercover within the Sweden Democrats’ communications department, reveals a number of things, including attempts at smear campaigns on politicians from other parties.

It reveals a total of 23 different anonymous accounts spread across TikTok, YouTube, Instagram and Facebook, which are all run by the Sweden Democrats and also spread for example radical anti-immigration views. These accounts have a combined 260,000 followers and published roughly 1,000 posts in the first three months of the year, which were viewed over 27 million times.

In one clip, communications head Joakim Wallerstein tells the group of troll factory workers to “find shit” on the Christian Democrats’ top candidate for the EU parliament, Alice Teodorescu Måwe – despite the fact that the so-called Tidö coalition agreement between the Moderates, Christian Democrats, Liberals and the Sweden Democrats states that they should respect and not attack each other.

The leaders of the other three right-wing parties all called the revelations a violation of the Tidö agreement, but Kristersson told TT that the collaboration would continue, although he added that trust in the Sweden Democrats had been damaged. Asked whether or not it was possible to trust the Sweden Democrats, who until now have consistently denied rumours of a troll factory, he said:

“I can’t answer that right now,” adding “I think there are clear signs that they have smeared opponents.”

Sweden Democrat party secretary Mattias Bäckström Johansson reiterated on Thursday that they consider the documentary an “influence operation”, but promised to adjust some of their posts on social media in the future, specifically the ones that mention the other Tidö parties.

“We are prepared to make small adjustments to soften the tone going forward, so that we can again focus on solving important problems in society,” he told TT, saying that the posts were satire clips spread by two members of the party’s communications department.

He said the pair would be assigned other jobs until they’ve been trained in the Tidö agreement’s so-called “respect clause”, and that the Sweden Democrats had shown the other three parties a list of social media posts about those three parties that they would delete.

But the Liberals said it wasn’t enough and demanded that the Sweden Democrats close down all anonymous accounts, that the four Tidö parties halt all joint press conferences until the EU election, and that the Sweden Democrats commit to following the respect clause.

Representatives of the four parties were set to meet on Thursday afternoon.

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