Magdalena Andersson and Jimmie Åkesson clash intensely during SVT Aktuellt debate on unemployment and integration.
Magdalena Andersson and Jimmie Åkesson clash intensely during SVT Aktuellt debate on unemployment and integration.
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Andersson and Åkesson clash in heated Aktuellt debate

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Leaders of Sweden's Social Democrats and Sweden Democrats, Magdalena Andersson and Jimmie Åkesson, faced off in an intense duel on SVT's Aktuellt Wednesday evening. The debate covered social media troll factories, high unemployment, and integration policy ahead of the 2026 election. Both accused each other of hypocrisy and political theater in a confrontation that benefits their parties.

On Wednesday evening, December 3, 2025, Magdalena Andersson (S) and Jimmie Åkesson (SD) met in a duel on SVT's Aktuellt. The leaders of Sweden's two largest parties debated social media, unemployment, and integration, with a high tone underscoring their roles as each other's main opponents ahead of the 2026 election.

Social media was first. Andersson defended the Social Democrats' media company AiP's accounts, claiming they differ from SD's previous 'troll factory' exposed by TV4. 'It is clear that it is AiP driving these accounts. It is fundamentally different from the troll factory revelation,' she said. Åkesson called it hypocrisy and a 'real troll factory,' accusing S of deceiving and tracking youth via anonymous accounts and data. 'You are doing roughly the same thing,' he added, citing examples like Tyresö Nyheter.

The debate heated up as Andersson countered that SD's accounts spread Russian narratives, white power propaganda, and mock women, while Åkesson accused S of antisemitism.

Next was unemployment, at 8.9 percent in October, affecting 509,000 people. Andersson criticized the Tidö government's policy: 'It is mass unemployment damaging Sweden. In a downturn, one should invest in ordinary hard-working households.' Åkesson blamed immigration policy under S: 'It stems from the irresponsible immigration policy for which Magdalena Andersson is largely responsible.'

On integration, Åkesson questioned the concept and proposed structural solutions: 'The Swedish people never asked to be integrated into the old parties' multicultural chaos.' He wanted requirements, reduced benefits, or return migration grants. Andersson dismissed it as 'political theater' and emphasized strict migration policy and investments in vulnerable areas: 'We cannot have children growing up in overcrowding, widespread poverty, high unemployment, schools that don't measure up, and gang criminals selling drugs on the square.'

A side question concerned bans on burka and niqab in public spaces. Åkesson said yes, calling it women's oppression. Andersson agreed on the oppression but was cautious: 'The risk is that women become confined at home.'

The debate reinforces the conflict between S and SD, sidelining the Moderates and Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson. Analysts note both parties benefit from a clear opponent position to mobilize voters.

사람들이 말하는 것

X users react to the heated Andersson-Åkesson debate on SVT Aktuellt, with Social Democrats blaming the SD-supported government for a 100,000 rise in unemployment and lack of solutions, while others highlight Åkesson's accusations of S troll factories and criticisms of SVT bias favoring S narratives. Sentiments range from partisan attacks to praise for the intense confrontation ahead of 2026 elections.

관련 기사

Jimmie Åkesson debating with Magdalena Andersson on migration policy in a TV studio.
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Åkesson questions S credibility in migration debate

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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.

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

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Party leaders debated energy, healthcare, economy and migration in SVT's Agenda on Sunday evening. The tone was more restrained than in the autumn debate, but tensions rose over the parliamentary vote compensation system and energy policy. Jimmie Åkesson accused the Greens of trying to 'buy' votes from independents.

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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