Swedish
Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt has conceded defeat following the country's
general election. A left-leaning coalition is expected to win the most seats in
parliament, but without an absolute majority.
Deutsche Welle,
15 Sep 2014
Reinfeldt
admitted on Sunday that his government, a grouping of four center-right parties
which has been in power for eight years, appeared to have been voted out of
office.
"The
center-left has more seats (in parliament) than the Alliance," Reinfeldt told
party supporters. "So tomorrow I am going to hand in mine and my
government's resignation."
Reinfeldt
said he would next year step down as leader of the Moderates, the largest party
in the Alliance - which saw its support plummet.
While the
Alliance garnered 39.1 percent, the center-left Red-Green bloc managed 43.7
percent - making it the largest grouping but well short of an overall majority.
Social
Democrat leader Stefan Lofven is expected to become Sweden's next prime
minister, and will need to enter coalition talks with other parties in the
Red-Green bloc, including the environmentalist Green Party and possibly also
Sweden's ex-communist Left Party.
Lofven's
party enjoyed a huge improvement in its share of the vote, up from 5.7 percent
in 2010 to at least 13 percent this time around, amid disquiet about a growing
gap between rich and poor.
"There's
something that is falling apart in Sweden," said Lofven. "Tonight
Sweden has answered that we need change."
Reinfeldt and his party are considered to have done well in steering Sweden through the financial crisis |
However,
even a united Red-Green bloc would still need support from outside to pursue
its agenda.
Feminists
fail to cross threshold
One
possible partner, Feminist Initiative, had been hovering around the 4 percent threshold
to enter the parliament - but failed to attract enough votes in the end.
And while
the far right anti-immigration Sweden Democrats won 13 percent in the poll, and
47 seats as a result, other parties refuse to work with them. Lofven ruled out
any possibility of doing so immediately after Reinfeldt's concession.
"First of all, 87 percent did not vote for them," he said.
"Their values are so far from ours."
The most
likely option on Sunday evening was for the left-leaning alliance to seek out
one of Reinfeldt's coalition partners.
The
incumbent prime minister and his conservative Moderate Party are widely
credited with doing a good job of shepherding Sweden through the global
financial crisis that broke out towards the end of the last decade. However,
the defeat had been predicted in polling, with critics pointing to a growing
income gap between the country's rich and poor in the eight years since
Reinfeldt took office.
rc/crh (AFP, AP, dpa, Reuters)
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