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POLITICS

Swedish prime minister: ‘Sweden needs a new, more intrusive, social policy’

Sweden's prime minister, Ulf Kristersson, has called for a new, more aggressive social policy to prevent children being drawn into gang crime in deprived areas of Sweden's cities in his speech to the Almedalen political festival.

Swedish prime minister: 'Sweden needs a new, more intrusive, social policy'
Sweden's prime minister Ulf Kristersson makes his keynote speech at the Almedalen political festival. Photo: Anders Wiklund/TT

Kristersson called for tougher family planning policies to stop women in vulnerable areas from having too many children, for compulsory pre-schools, and for “an army of adults to set boundaries against anti-social behaviour”, likening the reforms required to those brought in to combat slum poverty in Sweden at the start of the 20th century. 

“We once battled poverty in Sweden with a unique combination of a rational view of knowledge, intrusive social reforms, family planning and an ideal of upstanding behaviour,” he said. “I believe Sweden needs to make this journey once again.” 

The prime minister’s speech has been the highpoint of the Almedalen political festival, ever since the Social Democrat leader Olof Palme began the tradition of holding an informal speech in the Almedalen park in Visby, the capital of Gotland, back in 1968. 

In his call for a tougher social policy, Kristersson drew on his own background as the city councillor responsible for social policy in Stockholm. 

He complained that Sweden’s system of child benefit acted as “an incentive to have more children”. 

“Instead we should encourage women facing social exclusion to enter the labour market. That would be a real feminist home policy!” he declared. “Today, Sweden is successfully funding family planning – in other countries. But we don’t want to talk about the same trap for women when it happens in Sweden.” 

Kristersson predicted that some people in society would resist a more intrusive social policy. 

“Some people aren’t going to like the fact that society quite literally knocks on their door. Some people are going to complain about being singled out, but we need to lay any anxiety to one side and intervene earlier and more decisively. What we’ve done so far quite simply does not work.” 

At the start of his speech, Kristersson held a minute’s silence in memory of Ing-Marie Wieselgren, the psychiatrist who was stabbed to death at the festival last year, saying that he had worked with her as a city councillor. 

“She exemplified in human form so much that is good about Sweden: always putting knowledge and science in the centre, always with empathy and sensitivity, and always being curious about solving the most difficult problems,” he said. 

He also ran through a list of what he saw as his government’s achievements since taking office in November last year, such as making Sweden’s migration policy as restrictive as possible under EU laws, reducing the reception of UN quota refugees by 80 percent, increasing the salary threshold for labour migration, and building more prisons. 

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POLITICS

EXPLAINED: How radically does a new report aim to change Sweden’s public broadcasters?

Sweden's four-party government bloc have broken with the other parties in a parliamentary committee on public service broadcasting, adding what the opposition complains are "radically changed" proposals. How shocking are they?

EXPLAINED: How radically does a new report aim to change Sweden's public broadcasters?

What is the Public Service inquiry? 

On the face of it, there is nothing particularly alarming about a parliamentary inquiry into the regulation and funding of Sweden’s three public service broadcasters: television broadcaster SVT, radio broadcaster SR, and UR, which provides educational programming. 

The committee, which included members from each party in parliament, was instructed to decide how the three broadcasters should be regulated between 2026 and 2033, its next remit period, and to make proposals which “create good conditions for public service organisations to maintain and protect their independence”. 

Similar parliamentary inquiries provided their conclusions in 2012, under the centre-right Alliance government, and in 2016 under the centre-left Social Democrat-Green Party government.

In his report, the inquiry’s chair, former Christian Democrat leader Göran Hägglund, said the committee supported the idea that the public broadcasters should still have a broad remit, and also that their independence should continue to be protected.

So why the controversy? 

The opposition parties are complaining that the committee, which started off working with cross-party consensus as its goal, had changed character at the last moment, with the three government parties and the far-right Sweden Democrats (together known as the Tidö parties after the palace where their collaboration started) suddenly pushing for the inclusion of previously undiscussed and radical changes. 

“Very late in the work on the inquiry, major differences have arisen as a consequence of the Tidö parties’ internal negotiations, which explains the many reservations and the alternative proposal for allocation of funds that our parties propose,” the committee members for the Social Democrats, Green Party, Centre Party, and Left Party, said in an opinion piece published in the Dagens Nyheter newspaper.  

“We regret that the committee has not been able to unite behind the conclusions. At a late stage the Tidö parties chose to do their own thing, which is unusual. There has been a clear reluctance to look more widely for a solution,” the Social Democrats’ culture spokesperson, Lawen Redar, said at a press meeting.  

Perhaps the most controversial of the changes include: 

  • Stripping out a clause that requires the three broadcasters to ensure programmes reflect “equality” and “diversity”
  • Changing future funding so that the broadcasters get funding increased by just one percent annually between 2031-2033 
  • Proposing a new inquiry into fusing the three broadcasters into a single national broadcaster 
  • Pushing public service broadcasters to focus more on TV and radio, and less on the internet or social media

Is this a demolition of public service broadcasters? 

Well, not really. 

Sweden’s public service broadcasters have traditionally received an annual increase in funding of about 2 percent – in line with Sweden’s inflation target. This meant for a decade from 2010 until 2021, it saw a real rise in funding, but meant the broadcasters were hit hard by the inflation of over 8 percent in 2022 and nearly 6 percent in 2023, with many making layoffs. 

The inquiry recommends increasing funding, which was a combined 9.1 billion kronor in 2024, by 3 percent in 2026, 2 percent between 2027 and 2030 and one percent between 2031 and 2033.

Cilla Benkö, the chief executive of SR, said that the funding reduction represented “a gradual downgrading” of SR, which would mean “fewer journalists and fewer programmes”, especially after the organisation had just carried out a series of layoffs. 

“For eight years, we’re going to be short of 2 billion kronor, and we need to upgrade our property. We own Radiohuset in Stockholm, which is from the 60s, and we don’t have the money to do it. If we don’t get it, we will have to take money from journalism, which will affect the public and also affect civil defence.” 

In their reservation from the report’s conclusions, the Social Democrats wrote that they believed that the government’s decision to reduce funding was “ideologically motivated”. 

Is stripping out “equality” and “diversity” from programme goals a political move? 

In the report, Hägglund made out that removing jämställdhet, meaning equality, and mångfald, meaning diversity, from the description of what the three broadcasters’ programmes should reflect was simply because they were redundant.

Broadcasters, he argued, are already required to do this under the Public Service Act. 

But it’s clear that even if it might not have a large impact on the broadcaster’s output in practice, this fits in with the ideology of the far-right Sweden Democrats, for whom “diversity” and “ethnic diversity” in particular are not a fundamental part of “democratic principles”, as they have been seen within Sweden’s public broadcasters. 

Whether this will have real impact or just be something the Sweden Democrats can use to impress their voters remains to be seen. 

What about the inquiry into combining Sweden’s three broadcasters into a single entity? 

When he presented the inquiry Hägglund said that Sweden was “strange” in having separate national broadcasters for TV, radio and eduction. 

“We know that Sweden is strange in this respect. Nearly all counties have a single combined company,” he said at the press conference. 

The committee has proposed that the government launch an inquiry into combining the three companies into a single entity, a proposal that the members for the Social Democrats, Centre Party, Green Party and Left Party did not support.  

The wastefulness of running three separate public broadcasters is a longstanding criticism of Sweden’s system, however. 

Websites should only be “complementary” to TV and radio, and changes to social media guidelines

The inquiry held back from calling for the three public broadcasters to reduce or limit the amount of content they publish on their websites, but said that text media should be only “complementary” to their core TV and radio output.

The inquiry also said that the demand that broadcasters be “non-partisan” and “factual”, should also cover what they publish on social media, with all publications, including those on social media open for examination by Sweden’s broadcasting regulator. 

Finally, the inquiry said that the broadcasters’ own platforms should be their “priority distribution channels” on the internet, and that use of social media platforms like TikTok, Instagram, or Snapchat should follow “an assessment of the risks and the potential consequences”. 

So what happens now?

The inquiry is now being sent out for consultation, after which it is likely to return to the parliament’s culture committee before a new bill is drafted and sent to parliament for a vote. 

The four centre-left parties who objected to many of the report’s conclusions have said they will continue working to get their positions into the final bill. However, as they don’t hold a majority in parliament, their leverage could be limited.

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