Tense illustration of Jimmie Åkesson demanding Liberals' Simona Mohamsson back down on SD in government, with PM Ulf Kristersson at party meetings.
Tense illustration of Jimmie Åkesson demanding Liberals' Simona Mohamsson back down on SD in government, with PM Ulf Kristersson at party meetings.
Image generated by AI

Åkesson demands Liberals back down in government question

Image generated by AI

Sverigedemokraterna's leader Jimmie Åkesson demands that the Liberals back down from their stance against including SD in a future government. Liberals' leader Simona Mohamsson stands firm on the party's decision not to support a government with SD ministers. The conflict escalates ahead of the next election, as Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson visits both parties' meetings.

At the Liberals' congress in Karlstad, the party decided on Friday to continue cooperating with the Moderates and Christian Democrats in a bourgeois government after the next election, but only collaborate with the Sweden Democrats in parliament—not in the government itself. Jimmie Åkesson, SD's leader, reacts sharply and demands cabinet posts for his party, or SD will go into opposition. 'I think it's reasonable that the party which is currently ten times smaller than ours backs down,' says Åkesson. He specifically points to justice and migration minister posts as reasonable for SD.

Simona Mohamsson emphasizes that it's up to Ulf Kristersson to resolve the conflict to form a majority government. 'It's up to the prime ministerial candidates to get a proposal through that has a majority in parliament,' she says, adding: 'It won't be easy, but I'm convinced we'll solve it.' Mohamsson gives no signals that L would yield, calling their stance 'our demands for our mandates.' In her speech, she hailed the Tidö agreement as 'liberal politics' and thanked both Kristersson and Åkesson for the cooperation so far, but stressed: 'It's important to have a bourgeois government and a bourgeois prime minister. Åkesson is not a bourgeois party.'

On Saturday, Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson visited both the Liberals' congress and SD's national days, an unusual move according to political scientist Marja Lemne. 'It can be seen as a trial balloon for how further approaches could occur,' she says. Kristersson did not comment on the conflict directly but said at the L meeting: 'It's a privilege to be prime minister in a team that likes to work together.' Åkesson doubts L's threats and regrets their decision, as it complicates support votes from M and SD.

What people are saying

X discussions highlight Jimmie Åkesson's dismissal of Liberalernas firm stance against SD ministers, demanding they back down or risk a Social Democrat government. Sentiments vary: skepticism toward L's credibility given past Tidö cooperation and low polls, criticism of L's hypocrisy, support for SD's demands, and neutral reporting from journalists. Kristersson's visits to both parties underscore tensions ahead of elections.

Related Articles

Jimmie Åkesson drawing red lines on political documents symbolizing new demands on benefits
Image generated by AI

Åkesson draws new red lines for Tidö parties

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

Sverigedemokraterna leader Jimmie Åkesson presented several new demands ahead of the autumn election. He rules out cuts to unemployment and sickness benefits and promises expanded dental care support.

SD leader Jimmie Åkesson and Liberal leader Simona Mohamsson visited the Moderates mingle in Stockholm on Thursday evening.

Reported by AI

Jimmie Åkesson (SD) and Magdalena Andersson (S) debated migration policy and green investments in SVT's Aktuellt. Åkesson argued that the Social Democrats lack credibility in promises of stricter migration.

The Social Democrats, Left Party and Greens are open to excluding the Sweden Democrats from the Riksdag’s voting balance system after the party broke the agreement last week. A new meeting of party group leaders is expected on Thursday. Full attendance was required from all MPs during Wednesday’s vote on nuclear power legislation.

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline