New figures show large gender gaps in party support

Demoskop's April poll reveals clear gender differences in support for Swedish parties. Among men the Tidö parties have 53 percent while the opposition has 45 percent. Among women the situation is reversed with the opposition at 63 percent and the Tidö parties at 36 percent.

The differences have become clearer over time according to opinion chief Johan Martinsson at Demoskop. The Sweden Democrats account for much of the gap with 24 percent support among men and 15 percent among women.

The Moderates are meeting in Stockholm this weekend to discuss how to attract more female voters. Culture Minister Parisa Liljestrand says the Moderates need to better explain the background to their reforms.

The Green Party has the opposite problem with only 5 percent support among men compared to 10 percent among women. The Christian Democrats have 6 percent among men and 3 percent among women.

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Swedish MPs Elsa Widding and Katja Nyberg defect from SD, tipping Tidö parties' parliamentary majority; PM Kristersson appears concerned in Riksdag.
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Tidö parties lose majority after SD independents' defection

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Sweden's Tidö parties now hold only 174 seats in parliament after former SD MPs Elsa Widding and Katja Nyberg announced they will vote with the opposition on certain issues. Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson's government is fully dependent on the two independents in key votes. Sverigedemokraterna accuses the Greens of buying the votes, which MP and the independents deny.

Isabella Löwengrip, a Moderaterna member, faced backlash after telling DN that women need to understand how governments work. She clarified to Aftonbladet that women often vote more emotionally than strategically. She attributes the loss of female voters to cooperation with the Sweden Democrats.

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Multiple media reports indicate the Liberal Party is preparing to reverse its firm stance against the Sweden Democrats entering government, with a board meeting set for Friday and a potential announcement amid low poll numbers and internal dissent.

Two prominent politicians in Älvdalen, one from the Moderates and one from the Social Democrats, have left their parties to join the Left Party ahead of the autumn municipal election. The move strengthens the Left Party locally. Dissatisfaction over the treatment of the northern districts Särna and Idre prompted the switch.

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Social Democrats leader Magdalena Andersson distances herself from earlier strong warnings about the Sweden Democrats' threat to democracy. In an interview on SVT's 30 Minutes, she instead criticizes SD for damaging democratic discourse under the Tidö government. She points to cuts in public service and attacks on critical voices as examples.

The Liberals in Malmö are ending their eight-year alliance with the Social Democrats and seeking cooperation with bourgeois parties for a power shift in the autumn election. Party leader Katrin Stjernfeldt Jammeh (S) is open to turning to the Left Party instead. The decision was made at the Liberals' annual meeting over the weekend.

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A new poll shows the Greens in Baden-Württemberg just one percentage point behind the CDU. The Greens poll at 27 percent, the CDU at 28 percent, days before the state election on March 8. The Greens' rise is linked to controversy over an old video of CDU candidate Manuel Hagel.

 

 

 

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