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POLITICS

The winner doesn’t take it all: Magdalena Andersson out of power but top of the polls

Despite losing power in September’s election, Sweden’s one-and-only female prime minister is still ruling their hearts, according to the polls.

The chamber of the Swedish parliament, Riksdag, showing a woman in blue speaking form the floor and a small cluster of people watching and listening from the side
Magdalena Andersson as opposition leader is free to hold forth while the pro-government parties led by Ulf Kristersson, Johan Pehrson and Ebba Busch wield power. Fredrik Sandberg/TT

Magdalena Andersson of the Social Democrats is seen positively by 55 percent of Swedes, the latest survey by pollsters Ipsos and daily newspaper DN suggests.

Meanwhile the current prime minister, Ulf Kristersson of the centre-right Moderates, is polling at just 32 percent.

And if we look at negative views, Swedish hearts seem to have hardened against all three party leaders of the governing coalition.

Hit especially hard is Liberal leader Johan Pehrson who is now seen unfavourably by a whopping 70 percent, compared with 47 percent in the Ipsos April 2022 poll.

After the election, he became minister for employment and integration in Kristersson’s government, which is supported by the Sweden Democrat party – a party that has long been seen by Swedish liberals as extremist.

“This is yet another sign that the government is having a tough time,” said Ipsos analyst Nicklas Källebring.

But it’s not just in this one poll that things are looking tough for the centre-right government.

In the February political poll for Novus, another polling company, Magdalena Andersson’s Social Democrats recorded their highest result since 2009, and in the Novus party leader poll from January she’s also riding high, seen favourably by 54 percent, while other leaders’ popularity is falling.

The CEO of Novus remarked about the other leaders that “I can’t remember seeing this kind of collapse ever before. Not just for the leaders of the pro-government parties. Or for the opposition parties. But fairly broad.”

Sweden is hence facing a situation where the only politician who is broadly popular is someone who is not in power.

But this doesn’t mean that Sweden needs to expect a change of government or even a change of party leaders soon.

The pro-government parties may be in a minority according to the opinion polls, but in Sweden’s parliament, the Riksdag, they have a majority of 176 to 173. This would only change if one of the pro-government parties felt unhappy enough to leave the coalition.

And if you look at how happy the parties are with their own leaders it’s a different story.

Ulf Kristersson may only have a rating of around 30 percent in the country as a whole, but among his own party’s voters it’s on 83 percent.

Likewise Liberal leader Johan Pehrson may have a generally negative rating in the Novus January survey, but among voters for his allied parties it’s only 23 percent.

The Liberal party itself is unfortunately polling so low that it’s hard to get a big enough sub-sample of its supporters to know what they think of Pehrson in a general poll.

As long as each of the leaders of Sweden’s governing parties can manage to hold the line against internal calls to leave the coalition, they can continue to govern. Even if they may not have overall opinion figures as rosy as those for their rival Magdalena Andersson.

The head of Novus, Torbjörn Sjöström, has also pointed out another development that has become clear from the last few weeks’ polling.

“There is a high level of political conflict and a strong polarisation,” he said to public broadcaster SVT at the end of January.

The proportion of Swedes who are not really taking sides seems to have shrunk. At this point the surveys suggest that the country is more definitely split between those who are warmly supportive and those who are disaffected and unsupportive of the government, with fewer remaining in the middle ground.

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2024 EUROPEAN ELECTIONS

Eligible voters to receive their EU election poll cards in the next few days

The EU elections will be held on June 9th, but advance voting begins next week in Sweden. And poll cards are being sent out as we speak.

Eligible voters to receive their EU election poll cards in the next few days

Everyone (all 7.7 million of them) who is eligible to vote in the upcoming EU elections should receive their poll card in the post by May 22nd at the latest, writes Sweden’s Election Authority in a statement, announcing that they are in the process of being sent out to voters.

Swedish citizens who are over the age of 18 on election day – including dual nationals – can vote in European elections, even if they don’t live in Sweden. They must, however, have been registered as living in Sweden at some time in the past.

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Non-Swedish citizens who are living in Sweden can only vote if they have citizenship of an EU country. So for example Irish, French or German citizens living in Sweden can vote in European elections but Americans, Indians, Australians, Britons and so on cannot.

If you are an EU citizen registered as living in Sweden, you should probably have already received a letter from the Election Authority, asking to you apply to be included or excluded from the Swedish election register for the EU election. The letter should include a form which you need to send in to the regional government where you live. Under EU rules, you are only vote in one country’s EU election.

You can cast your vote in advance from May 22nd, or go to your designated polling station on the day of the election, June 9th.

If you think you should have received a poll card but didn’t (or receive one and lose it), you can order a new one. You can ask to have it delivered by post, in which case the deadline for ordering it is noon on May 31st, or by email with a deadline of 7pm on June 9th.

Just over half of Swedish voters, 55 percent, voted in the last EU election in 2019.

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