Liberals

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A bar graph illustrating the Swedish Liberals party's record low poll result of 1%.
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Liberals hit record low of 1 percent in DN/Ipsos poll

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The Liberals reached a new record low of 1 percent in the latest DN/Ipsos poll. The party is far below the parliamentary threshold ahead of the 2026 election.

The government rejects the proposal to raise the reduction obligation and fuel tax required to meet climate targets.

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Borlänge's Liberal branch has confirmed its candidate list for the autumn municipal council election, led by Monica Lundin despite her national-level resignation from the party. She is followed by John Thornander and Ann-Sofie Jansson. Lundin expressed enthusiasm about the group.

Leading liberals in Jönköping nominate economic policy spokesperson Cecilia Rönn as new party leader instead of Simona Mohamsson. Meanwhile, L-profile Jan Jönsson says he will leave politics if the party's new line on cooperation with the Sweden Democrats is approved at Sunday's congress.

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Sweden's Center party gained 150 new members over the weekend, according to party secretary Hannes Hervieu. This is a sharp rise from the usual average of ten new members per week. Hervieu attributes the surge to the Liberals' decision to drop their red line against partnering with the Sweden Democrats.

Crisis-hit Sweden's Liberals suffer new resignations as Torkild Strandberg leaves the party leadership and Louise Eklund along with Gulan Avci opt out of running in the autumn parliamentary election. The party polls at a record-low 1.4 percent, well below the threshold for parliament. A crisis meeting is scheduled for the weekend to discuss the party's future.

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The Swedish Liberal Party is dealing with record-low poll numbers, sparking talks on crisis strategies at an upcoming board meeting. Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson refuses to urge voters to support the party despite its place in the government coalition. Party member Martin Melin calls the figures shaky.

 

 

 

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