SHARE
COPY LINK
For members

POLITICS IN SWEDEN

Can foreigners in Sweden vote in this summer’s EU elections?

The year 2024 is a bumper one for elections, among them the European elections which are scheduled for June. Sweden is of course a member of the EU – so can foreign residents vote in the elections that will almost certainly affect their daily lives?

Can foreigners in Sweden vote in this summer's EU elections?
A sign above the EU parliament in Brussels. Photo: Virginia Mayo/AP

Across Europe, people will go to the polls in early June to select their representatives in the European Parliament, with 21 seats up for grabs in Sweden. 

European elections usually see a much lower turnout than national elections: in 2019 only 55 percent of those eligible voted, compared to 84 percent in the 2022 national election. 

But the elections can still be important in Swedish domestic politics, allowing voters to show their dissatisfaction with the sitting government, bringing momentum to parties and party leaders who do well, and allowing new parties, like in the past the Pirate Party or the Feminist Initiative, to achieve real political power.  

When to vote

In Sweden, the election will be held on June 9th, but you can vote in advance (förtidsrösta) from May 22nd.

Each municipality will typically set up one or more special voting places, often in a public library, where you can go and vote early if you have already decided which party you want to vote for, or are worried you will not be able to find time on election day. 

Those eligible to vote who are outside Sweden on election day, can send a postal vote from April 25th.

They can also vote at an overseas voting station, which are normally found at Swedish embassies, from May 16th.  

Who can vote? 

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. 

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 and so on cannot.

This is different from local and regional elections in Sweden, for which being a resident for three years in the municipality or region is enough to be eligible.

Brits in Sweden used to be able to vote before Brexit, but now cannot. 

If you are an EU citizen registered as living in Sweden, you should probably have already received a letter from the Swedish Election Authority (Valmyndigheten), 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.

How does the election work?

The system for European elections differs from most countries’ domestic polls.

MEPs are elected once every five years. Each country is given an allocation of MEPs roughly based on population size.

At present there are 705 MEPs. Germany – the country in the bloc with the largest population – has the most while the smallest number belong to Malta with just six.

Sweden elects its MEPs through direct proportional representation via the “list” system, so that parties gain the number of MEPs equivalent to their share of the overall vote. MEPs do not represent a particular region. 

So for example if the Social Democrats win 35 percent of the overall vote they will get 7 of the total of 21 MEPs. Exactly who gets to be an MEP is decided in advance by the parties who publish their candidate lists in priority order.

So let’s say that the Social Democrats do get 35 percent of the vote – then the people named from 1 to 7 on their list get to be MEPs, and the people lower down on the list do not.

In the run-up to the election, the parties decide on who will be toppkandidater (candidates heading the list) and these people will almost certainly be elected.

Once in parliament, parties usually seek to maximise their influence by joining one of the “blocks” made up of parties from neighbouring countries that broadly share their interests and values eg centre-left, far-right, green.

The parliament alternates between Strasbourg and Brussels. 

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.
For members

2024 EUROPEAN ELECTIONS

Who are Sweden’s top candidates in the European election?

Voting for the 2024 European elections will soon get under way, but who are the top candidates the Swedish parties want to send to the European parliament?

Who are Sweden's top candidates in the European election?

This year’s elections for the European Parliament will be held on June 9th across Europe, but in Sweden advance voting opens on May 22nd, with 21 seats up for grabs. 

Sweden elects its MEPs through direct proportional representation, so that parties gain the number of MEPs equivalent to their share of the overall vote. But exactly who gets to be an MEP is decided in advance by the parties who publish their candidate lists in priority order.

This article is a guide to the Swedish parties currently represented in the European Parliament and the individuals heading the lists for each party (toppkandidater – top candidates). The parties are listed in the order of how they performed in the 2019 European elections.

If you want to know how the election actually works and who’s eligible to vote, read this article instead.

Social Democrats

Campaign slogan: Do something great

Current number of seats: 5

Top candidate: Heléne Fritzon

Heléne Fritzon. Photo: Fredrik Persson/TT

Heléne Fritzon has been a member of the European parliament since 2019. Her previous career includes being migration minister and deputy justice minister under Prime Minister Stefan Löfven, and before that she was mayor of Kristianstad. She’s also a certified primary school teacher.

The Social Democrats want to strengthen European cohesion according to their election manifesto, using the EU to combat security threats, climate emissions, crime and the cost of living crisis.

They want, among other things, more aid for Ukraine and tougher sanctions on Russia, improved civil crisis management so that the union is better equipped to handle disasters, stronger work against disinformation, abortion rights included in the constitution, tougher migration rules, and that it should be possible to expel member states that can no longer be considered to be democracies.

The Social Democrats belong to the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats in the European parliament, a centre-left group primarily comprised of fellow social democrats.

Moderates

Campaign slogan: For a free and secure Europe

Current number of seats: 4

Top candidate: Tomas Tobé

Tomas Tobé. Photo: Jonas Ekströmer/TT

Tomas Tobé has been a member of the European Parliament since 2019.

He’s born in Gävle and is a well-known member of the Moderates, having represented the party as party secretary and chaired several parliamentary committees during his 13 years as a member of Sweden’s national parliament. He’s also got a background in business and entrepreneurship.

In his own words, he wants to prevent criminals from taking advantage of the European free movement, invest in renewable and nuclear energy, strictly regulate immigration, increase growth and see more efficient use of the EU’s foreign aid budget to improve global security and stability.

The Moderates are also in favour of including the right to abortion in EU’s constitution, cutting down on red tape and making sure that Sweden, not Brussels, sets the rules for its forest industry.

In the European parliament, the Moderates belong to the European People’s Party (EPP), a centre-right group gathering conservative, liberal-conservative and Christian democratic parties.

Sweden Democrats

Campaign slogan: My Europe builds walls

Current number of seats: 3

Top candidate: Charlie Weimers

Charlie Weimers. Photo: Fredrik Persson/TT

Charlie Weimers has been a member of the European parliament since 2019. He has only been a member of the Sweden Democrats since 2018 – prior to this he was a member of the Christian Democrats for two decades, and before that he was a member of the Moderates’ youth wing.

The far-right Sweden Democrats believe that “Europe is at war – Islamism, gang crime and insecurity is spreading while Brussels’ supranationalism has never been as intrusive as it is today” and, in his own words, Weimers wants to strengthen the EU’s borders, vote no to raising Sweden’s fee to the EU and reclaim power from Brussels, stop Islamic extremism and ship asylum seekers to third countries.

The Sweden Democrats toned down their Swexit rhetoric in the years following Brexit, but remain strong sceptics of the EU and last year called for a “reevaluation” of Sweden’s membership.

The party belongs to the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) group in the European parliament, a right-wing group with largely Eurosceptic and nationally conservative values.

Green Party

Campaign slogan: The climate, the climate, the climate

Current number of seats: 3

Top candidate: Alice Bah Kuhnke

Alice Bah Kuhnke. Photo: Janerik Henriksson/TT

Alice Bah Kuhnke has been a member of the European parliament since 2019. Before that she was a member of parliament and was culture and democracy minister in Stefan Löfven’s government. Prior to her political career she was a television journalist. She is one of Sweden’s most well-known MEPs but has repeatedly declined taking over as Green Party leader.

The Green Party usually performs much better in the EU election than in the Swedish national election, where it’s currently languishing close to the four-percent parliamentary threshold.

Their EU campaign has one overarching focus, in case you didn’t guess: the climate. This includes cutting emissions, promoting a circular economy, banning fossil fuel subsidies, banning flights within the EU on routes where it would take less than three hours to take the train, closing all coal plants before 2030, investing in renewable energy, and not considering nuclear power as renewable or sustainable.

It also wants to protect the rights of asylum seekers and work against racism and discrimination.

The Green Party belongs to the Greens/European Free Alliance (Greens/EFA) group in the European parliament, which promotes environmental issues and the rights of minorities.

Centre Party

Campaign slogan: Hold the line

Current number of seats: 2

Top candidate: Emma Wiesner

Emma Wiesner. Photo: Samuel Steén/TT

Emma Wiesner has been a member of the European parliament since 2021, when she replaced Fredrick Federley. A civil engineer by trade, her previous jobs include working as an analyst for tech consultancy company Sweco and with public affairs in sustainability for Northvolt.

The Centre Party wants to “hold the line” against homophobia, xenophobia, climate deniers, populists and Russia, and while it is EU friendly it’s against over-regulation and wants to prevent Brussels bureaucrats from meddling in, for example, the Swedish forestry industry.

It wants to increase support for Ukraine, expel EU member states that are no longer democracies, cut EU funding for countries that don’t take responsibility for the climate, ban fossil fuel plants from 2035, cut emissions, and use trade sanctions against countries such as Russia, China and Iran.

The Centre Party belongs to the liberal and pro-EU Renew Europe group in the European parliament.

Christian Democrats

Campaign slogan: Borders and freedom

Current number of seats: 2

Top candidate: Alice Teodorescu Måwe

Alice Teodorescu Måwe. Photo: Pontus Lundahl/TT

Alice Teodorescu Måwe unexpectedly became the party’s top candidate after its previous MEP Sara Skyttedal was ousted in a political drama that made 80s TV show Dynasty look meek. Skyttedal has since launched her own political party, Folklistan, which will be contesting the EU elections.

Teodorescu Måwe joined the Christian Democrats the day before she was announced as their candidate. She has previously worked for the Moderates and as a former political journalist is known for being firmly on the right, but has never before formally represented a political party.

The Christian Democrats want the EU to “return to its core mission, guaranteeing peace, freedom and free trade” and it wants Brussels to take a hands-off approach to issues such as social policy, health care and labour markets, and want minimal EU regulations of forest and agriculture.

It does however want the EU to strengthen its security cooperation, fast-track electrification and nuclear investment and make migrants apply for asylum before and not upon arriving in Europe.

The Christian Democrats, like the Moderates, belong to the EPP group.

Left Party

Campaign slogan: Climate, welfare, faith in the future

Current number of seats: 1

Top candidate: Jonas Sjöstedt

Jonas Sjöstedt. Photo: Anna Hållams/TT

Jonas Sjöstedt is most known as the former leader of the Left Party, but he also has a long career within the European parliament, where he served from 1995-2009. He was a member of the Swedish parliament from 2010 until 2020, when he resigned as Left Party leader.

The Left Party and the Sweden Democrats are as far from each other as you can get on the political spectrum, but they have one thing in common: they are EU sceptics who both dropped their calls for a Swexit referendum in the run-up to the last European election in 2019.

They want to stop the climate crisis, lower prices of food and electricity and boost democracy, and believe that politicians and not the market are responsible for welfare and prosperity. They are still against expanding the EU’s power over economy and welfare, and are against the Euro.

The Left Party belongs to the Left in the European Parliament – GUE/NGL group, which is home to parties with democratic socialist, communist (although the Swedish Left Party dropped communist from its name and manifesto in the 1990s) and generally Eurosceptic values.

Liberals

Campaign slogan: Stronger Europe, Stronger Sweden

Current number of seats: 1

Top candidate: Karin Karlsbro

Karin Karlsbro. Photo: Janerik Henriksson/TT

Karin Karlsbro has been a member of the European parliament since 2019. She has previously worked for the Liberals as a councillor in Norrtälje, administrative director at the Liberals’ parliament office, and chief of staff for then-Integration Minister Nyamko Sabuni. Before returning to politics in 2019, she was chief sustainability officer for a major Stockholm property firm.

Karlsbro wants Brussels to stick together to help Ukraine win the war against Russia, make the EU the world’s most important environmental organisation, and set up a new European police force.

The Liberals also want to protect the right to abortion in the EU constitution and toughen up sanctions on countries that violate press freedom, LGBTQI rights and the justice system.

They are traditionally the most EU-friendly party in Sweden and want to adopt the Euro.

The Liberals belong to Renew Europe, like the Centre Party.

Politics in Sweden is The Local’s weekly analysis, guide or look ahead to what’s coming up in Swedish politics. Update your newsletter settings to receive it directly to your inbox. 

SHOW COMMENTS