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OPINION

OPINION: Yes Kristersson, new Swedes will stand up for Sweden

Ulf Kristersson has cast doubt on the willingness of naturalised Swedes to defend the country. But new Swedish citizens are not less patriotic, and making Swedish citizenship rules less generous won’t make Sweden safer, argues James Savage.

OPINION: Yes Kristersson, new Swedes will stand up for Sweden
New conscripts arrive at the barracks of the Dalarna Regiment in Falun at the beginning of thier national service in August 2022. Photo: Ulf Palm/TT

Sweden naturalises more people than any other country in Europe – 861 people per 100,000 inhabitants in 2021, more than four times the EU average.

Perhaps this isn’t surprising. Not only has Sweden had high migration for many years, but the process is almost as easy as sending in your SMS tax return.

To become French you have to pass four language tests, then submit to a face-to-face grilling, in French, by a local official. After nine years living in Denmark you can apply to become a Dane, but first you’ll need to have been in work for three-and-half of the past four years, pass tests on language and knowledge of Danish society and have your application approved by a parliamentary majority.

Contrast that with Sweden, which doesn’t currently ask new citizens to speak the language, prove that they know which dish to take first on the smörgåsbord (it’s the fish) or name any of the works of Strindberg. It certainly doesn’t ask you to swear to take up arms to defend the country.

All you have to do in most cases is live legally in Sweden for five years, or three if you’re in a relationship with a Swede, send in your application and wait for it to be processed.

So it’s maybe fair for existing Swedes to ask whether their over 50,000 new compatriots in 2023 have bought into the system. Which brings me to Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson, who is currently trying to make it harder to become a Swedish citizen, among other things by introducing language tests and increasing from five to seven years the time new citizens will have to have spent in Sweden. 

In a speech at the Folk & Försvar defence conference last week – where attendees were bombarded with warnings about the risk of war – Kristersson took this one step further, by seeming to imply that naturalised Swedes were less likely to be willing to defend Sweden militarily. 

For all the reasons above it is a perfectly understandable assumption. There’s also scant evidence for it. Of course some naturalised Swedes are terrible citizens (as are many native Swedes), but overall they’re not less willing to defend Sweden’s democracy.

On the contrary, what little evidence there is suggests that Swedes born abroad are actually more willing to fight than people born in Sweden. A study from 2021 from FOI, the Swedish defence research institute, using 2018 data, showed 60 percent of foreign born Swedes were willing to fight for Sweden’s defence, compared to 50 percent of native-born Swedes. 

This also tallies with what a lot of The Local’s readers told us. For any normal person the prospect, however remote, of putting yourself in harm’s way to defend your society is chilling. For my own part as someone who naturalised in 2010, during a period when Sweden was dismantling its armed forces, the idea I’d ever have to fight for my new country would have seemed absurd. 

READ ALSO: Are immigrants in Sweden less willing to defend the country?

But we immigrants, no less than Swedes, have witnessed the unprovoked invasion of Ukraine. We also have a big stake in Sweden’s future as a free and democratic European country. No serious person becomes a citizen of a new country, contrary to what Kristersson implied, just for the passport. 

New citizens invariably already have the right to remain in Sweden; becoming a citizen is for many people a statement of belonging, of civic engagement and of commitment. There’s research that shows that in fact becoming a citizen itself makes people more committed to their new country.

Not everything about Sweden’s new citizenship rules is unfair. But overall Sweden’s generous approach to citizenship has served the country well. Most ordinary immigrants already take citizenship seriously, perhaps more seriously than their native-born would-be compatriots. Stopping more people from becoming citizens won’t help Sweden defend itself – quite the opposite.

Member comments

  1. I think the society as a whole is resorting into a tribal/ caveman like mindset. The in-group out-group dynamic is clearly evident and even embraced widely in Europe and elsewhere. The constant push to prove your worthiness of being a citizen is more of a tool to assure the natives of a sense entitlement to a piece of land.. Nation states are created for administrative purposes and politicians should engage in diplomacy to prevent wars. The solution is not in prepping the population to sacrifice their lives for any piece of land, that’s 17th century.

    The current right-wing coalition is akin to an early 20th century European off the boat political party which is only engaging in ethno linguistic nationalism. In the age of globalism, AI and advanced medical care, if one this is clear, it is that the human brain is still wired to be largely tribal/pagan like our ancestors, one trait that seem to be evolutionarily preserved and less prone to adaptation.

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INSIDE SWEDEN

Inside Sweden: Why troll factory won’t spark a government crisis

The Local's editor Emma Löfgren rounds up the biggest stories of the week in our Inside Sweden newsletter.

Inside Sweden: Why troll factory won't spark a government crisis

Hej,

News that the Sweden Democrats are operating a far-right troll factory – which among other things the party uses to smear political opponents as well as its supposed allies – has caused probably the biggest rift yet between them and the three other parties that make up Sweden’s ruling coalition.

The leaders of the Moderates, Christian Democrats and Liberals all strongly criticised the Sweden Democrats’ blatant violation of the so-called “respect clause” in their Tidö collaboration agreement – the clause that states that the four parties should speak respectfully of each other in the media.

But after crisis talks held on Thursday, the conflict appears to be dying down.

The Sweden Democrats hit out strongly at the TV4 Kalla Fakta documentary where the troll factory was revealed, calling it a smear campaign and disinformation, but simultaneously went as far as to confirm that they do run anonymous social media accounts for which they refused to apologise.

They did say sorry to the Tidö parties for including them in the smear campaigns, and promised to remove some of the posts that had offended the other three parties, plus reassign a couple of members of staff to other duties until they’ve been given training on the Tidö “respect clause”.

But that doesn’t remove the fact that they vowed to continue the anonymous social media accounts whose existence they had prior to the documentary consistently denied, or the fact that some of the social media posts shared not only vague anti-immigration content, but white power propaganda.

The Liberals took the row the furthest, with Liberal leader Johan Pehrson describing people in his party as skitförbannade – pissed off as hell. He said ahead of the crisis meeting that they would demand that the Sweden Democrats cease all anonymous posting, which the latter rejected.

The party had two choices: walk out of the government collaboration and possibly spark a snap election, or walk back its strong words ahead of the meeting and wait for it to blow over.

They chose a kind of middle way, and called for an inquiry to be launched into banning political parties from operating anonymous social media accounts. The Social Democrats immediately accused the Liberals of trying to “bury the issue in an inquiry” – a classic Swedish political method of indecisive conflict avoidance which the Social Democrats themselves are well familiar with.

The Christian Democrats and Moderates both said that the Sweden Democrats had accepted their criticism and welcomed the party’s reshuffling of staff within its communications department, adding that it still had to prove its commitment to the Tidö agreement going forward.

So why isn’t this causing a bigger government crisis?

We asked Evelyn Jones, a politics reporter for the Dagens Nyheter daily, to come on the Sweden in Focus podcast to explain it to us:

“The Sweden Democrats are the biggest party in this coalition, even though they’re not part of the government. So the government really needs them. It’s hard for them to just stop cooperating with the Sweden Democrats,” she said.

“The cooperation between the government parties and the Sweden Democrats has been going pretty smoothly since the last election – more smoothly than a lot of people thought. This is probably the biggest crisis so far, but how big it is, is hard to say.”

You can listen to the full interview with her and the rest of the Sweden in Focus podcast here

In other news

If you are a descendant of a Sweden-born person and would like to find out more about them, there are ways to do that. I wrote this week about how to research your Swedish ancestry.

That guide was prompted by my interview with the chair of a community history group in a small parish in north-central Sweden, which has tried to get to the bottom of rumours that US mega star Taylor Swift’s ancestors hail from their village. I had so much fun writing this article.

The EU elections will be held on June 9th, but advance voting begins next week in Sweden. And poll cards are already being sent out, so if you’re eligible to vote you should receive yours soon.

Sweden’s consumer price index fell to 3.9 percent in April, below 4.0 percent for the first time in two years, reinforcing predictions that the central bank will keep lowering interest rates.

Sweden’s four-party government bloc has 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?

Many people move to Sweden because of their partner’s career. Perhaps you’re one of these so-called “trailing spouses”. I’ve been asking readers in this situation how they’re settling in, and will have an article for you next week. There’s still time to answer our survey to share your experience.

Thanks for reading.

Have a good weekend,

Emma

Inside Sweden is our weekly newsletter for members which gives you news, analysis and, sometimes, takes you behind the scenes at The Local. It’s published each Saturday and with Membership+ you can also receive it directly to your inbox.

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