Liberal Party congress in Karlstad: delegates react to decision excluding Sweden Democrats from government in new Tidö deal.
Liberal Party congress in Karlstad: delegates react to decision excluding Sweden Democrats from government in new Tidö deal.
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Liberalerna bars SD from government

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At their congress in Karlstad, Sweden's Liberal Party has decided to prevent the Sweden Democrats from joining the government after the election. The party supports a new Tidö agreement with the Moderates and Christian Democrats, with the Sweden Democrats as a support party but without ministerial posts. The decision followed a lengthy debate with numerous speakers.

During the Liberal Party's congress in Karlstad on November 21, 2025, the decision was made after an extended debate involving more than 70 speakers, which was interrupted to allow for a vote. The party board's line prevailed with a broad majority: the Liberals will work for a new Tidö agreement after the election, excluding the Sweden Democrats from the government but allowing them to support the bourgeois coalition of Moderates, Christian Democrats, and Liberals.

Party secretary Fredrik Brange expressed relief after the decision: "It means we will go to the election to re-elect the current government with the Moderates and Christian Democrats and also the Sweden Democrats as a support party. We are thus going to the election on a continued bourgeois government." He emphasized that post-election negotiations will be tough but solvable, similar to 2022, and that the party has broad support for the line.

The debate was lively with diverging opinions. Pierre Månsson from Skåne appealed for unity: "Dear liberals, not shit-talkers." Other speakers like Thomas Söderström from Norrbotten wanted to focus on policy issues, while Jens Wennberg from Västerbotten criticized cooperation with the Sweden Democrats. Mauricio Rojas from Skåne moved approval of the party board's proposal and stressed unity. Lenja Sharif from Jönköping argued for influence rather than red lines.

Earlier in the day, the general policy committee unanimously backed the proposal, according to chair Gulan Avci: "The Liberals go to the election as a bourgeois party and want to continue within the framework of a new Tidö agreement." Simona Mohamsson is seen as the winner in the issue. Focus now shifts to policy matters ahead of the election in ten months.

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Reactions on X to Liberalerna's congress decision in Karlstad to bar SD from ministerial posts while supporting Tidö with SD as external support are largely negative from right-leaning users. SD supporters deride L as irrelevant and poll-collapsing, predicting their expulsion from parliament. Critics argue the stance risks a stable right-wing government post-election. Positive or neutral views are scarce in high-engagement posts.

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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.

The Moderates in Region Dalarna presented a budget alternative yesterday ahead of the autumn election. The party opens the door to cooperation with the Sweden Democrats and other parties if moderate policies gain traction.

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

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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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.

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