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POLITICS IN SWEDEN

OPINION: Sweden Democrats have only themselves to blame for election setback

Sweden Democrat leader Jimmie Åkesson normally serves a cleaned-up, easily digestible version of far-right politics. This election he gave voters the real thing. It's no surprise fewer were ready to swallow, writes The Local's Nordic editor, Richard Orange.

OPINION: Sweden Democrats have only themselves to blame for election setback
The Sweden Democrats' lead MEP Charlie Weimers (right) together with the other top candidate Beatrice Timgren at the election vigial on Sunday. Photo: Pontus Lundahl/TT

Ten years ago, foreign journalists writing about the rapid rise of the far-right Sweden Democrats, used to describe the party’s leader, Jimmie Åkesson, as “every Swedish mother’s ideal son-in-law”.

This was the man who had joined a fringe neo-Nazi party and detoxified it, kicking out anyone revealed to be overtly racist rather than more acceptably “culturally nationalist”, and given it a smiling, well-presented front, with his neat haircut, chinos, and heavy use of the word rimligt (“reasonable”). 

But that changed when the party was at the start of last month hit by the mother of all journalistic stings.

A reporter from the broadcaster TV4 managed to get hired first by Riks, the supposedly independent YouTube channel, and then by the party’s communications division, and went on to show how the party uses anonymous social media accounts to attack its supposed political allies and to spread disinformation, with people internally calling it a trollfabrik or “troll farm”. 

It’s been the biggest political scandal in Sweden in years. But the damage to the Sweden Democrats came arguably less from the revelations themselves, than from how they reacted to them. 

Åkesson could have claimed the communications division had gone rogue, apologised and sacked the main offenders, and then pledged to stop using anonymous accounts in future. But instead he went on the offensive.

In a speech on Youtube, he claimed the investigation was part of a conspiracy – “a gigantic, domestic propaganda operation launched by the entire left-liberal establishment”. He then attacked politicians, journalists and activists as a klägg, meaning literally a “sticky morass”, a concept similar to Donald Trump’s “swamp”.

Sweden Democrat party leader Jimmie Åkesson gives a speech after the Sweden Democrats experienced their first ever retreat in an election on Sunday. Photo: Pontus Lundahl/TT

This set the tone for an election campaign where the party seemed to return to its early 1990s roots, with a slogan Mitt Europa bygger murar or “My Europe builds walls”, used to tie together hard-edged campaign videos. One, for instance, showed, a crowd of black, African migrants coursing down a street in Spain, before a cartoon wall comes down followed by the slogan, “My Europe builds walls”.

Åkesson then wrote an opinion piece in the Expressen newspaper in which he claimed Sweden was undergoing, or had undergone, a folkutbyte – literally “a replacement of peoples”, language he knew full well was used by Swedish neo-Nazis promoting the Great Replacement conspiracy theory, meaning it was guaranteed to enrage left and liberal journalists and dominate headlines for a few days.  

The plan was presumably to maximise publicity and to mobilise the party’s core voters, who are among the least likely to bother to turn out in EU elections.

Instead, the shift to more extreme rhetoric seems to have scared more moderate voters off. And a recording from the party’s election vigil of the Sweden Democrat MP David Lång singing the German racist song Ausländer raus, meaning “foreigners out!”, will mean that some, at least, will not regret their decision. 

With 94 percent of votes counted, the party is at 13.2 percent, down 2.2 percentage points on what it got in the last EU elections in 2019. On the face of it, that is not so dramatic.

As Åkesson was quick to stress in his speech at the party’s election vigil, the party has kept all three of its seats in the European parliament, so its power in Brussels remains undiminished, but he admitted the result was a disappointment. 

“We’re going to need to analyse why we didn’t grow but instead only kept our three seats – but don’t forget that we did keep our three mandates,” he said to cheers from supporters. 

He also seemed to defend the combative approach the party had taken after TV4’s troll farm revelations. 

“We are the Sweden Democrats. We are not a party that follows the herd or folds when someone else thinks we should. We are not a party that just lies down flat and says sorry,” he said. 

But for a party which has increased its share of the vote at every single election – both national and European – since it was founded in 1988, this is a watershed.

For Åkesson, it will come as a warning that the more radical politics and rhetoric his party has been flirting with since it gained real power in the Tidö Agreement with the three government parties – most notably in the provocative statements about Muslims made by the MP Richard Jomshof – may be too much for some its voters to stomach.

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. 

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POLITICS IN SWEDEN

Why Sweden’s Chat Control vote is causing parliamentary chaos

Sweden's government last week rushed a controversial EU internet surveillance proposal through a parliamentary committee, opening the way for it to be voted through by the European Council. What's going on?

Why Sweden's Chat Control vote is causing parliamentary chaos

What happened last week? 

After more than nine months of silence on Chat Control, the informal name given to the EU’s proposed “Regulation to prevent and combat child sexual abuse”, the government last Tuesday rushed a compromise proposal drawn up by the Belgian presidency through the Swedish parliament’s Justice Committee.

The representatives for the Green Party and the Left Party – both of whom are opposed to the measure – then somewhat mysteriously backed the government’s position without leaving a dissenting opinion. 

With only the Centre Party and the far-right Sweden Democrats opposing, Sweden’s government could then claim parliamentary backing for supporting the Belgian compromise at a planned meeting of the EU Council on Thursday. 

“Now our judgement is that an important step has been taken,” Justice Minister Gunnar Strömmer told TT in a written statement on Tuesday. “The government is therefore ready to take the next step and allow the EU Council and the Parliament to begin negotiations.” 

Sweden Democrat MP Adam Marttinen pointed out that both the Moderate and Liberal parties had criticised the proposal during the EU election campaign, saying that they would not push forward with the proposal, only to do so days after the election was over. 

“I think that was dishonest with voters,” he told TT. 

The Chat Control proposal was, however, not discussed as expected at the EU meeting meeting on Thursday, raising questions over whether it can be handled by the EU Council during the Belgian presidency. 

What is Chat Control? 

The proposal was put forward by Ylva Johansson, the European Commissioner for Home Affairs, in 2022. It aims to combat child pornography by forcing all encrypted messaging services operating in the EU to build in an “upload moderation” system or “backdoor” into their programmes.

This will allow all images and videos to be scanned for child sex abuse material before they are encrypted and sent to the recipient. 

The check would start with images and messages which have already been flagged as child pornography, but it would also look out for new abuse material. 

Users would have to give the messaging service they are using permission to scan their messages, and be stopped from sending videos or images if they do not give it.

The earliest proposal, from 2022, envisaged giving the upload moderation system the power to scan all messages, but the scope of the law has now been limited to image and video files. 

How would it work? 

That is unclear. One option is for the moderation system to be installed on each device used to send messages. Another is for the unencrypted message to first be sent to a cloud server for checking. Both are technologically tricky. 

“No one knows exactly how this would be done. There’s no technical description yet and that’s perhaps what is most frightening, that they are making laws and rules without knowing how they can be safely implemented,” Måns Jonasson, an expert at the Swedish Internet Foundation, told the TT newswire. 

Why is it criticised? 

Critics argue that by removing the possibility of having end-to-end encrypted communication within the EU, at least for ordinary, non-tech-savvy citizens, the law threatens to sharply circumscribe EU residents’ right to privacy. 

“How can this scanning be done in a safe way?” Jonasson asked. “If I take a picture of my children at the beach will I suddenly get flagged up by police for sending abuse material? Would teenagers sending naked pictures to one another also get flagged up? There are a thousand questions that haven’t been answered, and that’s even before you starting talking about whether it’s reasonable that all citizens’ mobile telephones and all images should be under surveillance by the police.”  

A risk, he said, was that once encrypted services had compulsory backdoors in place, authorities and potentially even hackers might use it for other purposes. 

“There are good examples of this. When you build in this kind of back door then it ends up being used by bad actors,” he said. 

And the group of people most likely to find a way to evade the controls, he said, were paedophiles. 

“If you’re a paedophile, you want to hide your activities so if you know that certain apps are being surveilled, then you’re obviously going to use other apps, so the question is why we should do it at all if it’s only those of us who are innocent who are going to be affected.” 

Why did the Green Party and Left Party MPs go against their own party lines? 

That is the mystery. The Green Party initially claimed that Rasmus Ling, the MP on the committee, had simply made a mistake. 

“In hindsight, we should have left a dissenting opinion, but we didn’t. It was a mistake. It is human to sometimes make mistakes,” the Green MP Rebecka Le Moine, who sits on the Swedish parliament’s EU committee, told TT.

“There are two separate versions, the Council’s compromise proposal, which is so general in its text that we cannot back it at all. Then there is a proposal that the Green group in the EU parliament have developed, which we back.” 

But internal messages obtained by the freelance journalist Emanuel Karlsten seemed to show that this was not the case, and that Ling knew exactly which version he was backing, and made a judgement that the compromise solved some of the issues the party had had with the original proposal. 

The Left Party representative, Gudrun Norberg, also claimed to have made an error. 

“It is true that I did not register a dissenting opinion at the committee meeting. That was a mistake and I truly regret it,” she wrote on Facebook. “It did not affect the result of the meeting and the question on Chat Control is far from fully determined. It will come before the [Swedish] parliament’s EU Committee, among other bodies, further on in the decision process.”   

What happens next? 

What last week’s decision does is open the way for Sweden to back the Belgian government’s compromise proposal in the EU Council, which – now that France has opened up to supporting the proposal – means there is no longer a blocking minority of countries in the EU Council of Ministers. 

This will theoretically allow the EU Council to take a collective position on the proposal, meaning negotiations can start with the EU Parliament. 

But, according to Karlsten, last Thursday’s meeting may have been the last chance for Belgium, which currently holds the EU Presidency, to put the measure forward, meaning the responsibility may now pass to Hungary. 

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. 

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