Illustration of commuters purchasing discounted monthly public transport passes in Sweden.
Illustration of commuters purchasing discounted monthly public transport passes in Sweden.
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Monthly public transport passes to be halved from July 1

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The government and the Sweden Democrats plan to halve the price of monthly public transport passes nationwide from July 1 until year-end. A support package of around 7 billion kronor will go to regions to cover revenue losses.

The Tidö parties are expected to present the proposal at a press conference on Tuesday. The support will run for six months and compensate regions for lower ticket revenues.

The opposition criticizes the measure sharply. Social Democrats party secretary Tobias Baudin calls the government desperate and says it lacks credibility on cheaper public transport.

Several regions welcome the reduction but warn of challenges with the tight timeline. No extra support is provided for increased traffic or higher fuel costs.

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Initial reactions on X mix support for making travel more affordable for low-income groups, skepticism toward the political actors involved, and notes that similar ideas were proposed earlier by other parties.

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Commuters on a Swedish bus with halved ticket prices graphic
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Government temporarily halves monthly ticket prices

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The Tidö parties announced on Tuesday that the price of monthly public transport passes will be halved from July 1 until year-end. The 6.5 billion kronor measure is loan-financed in response to the energy crisis.

The government is offering billions to halve the price of public transport period cards. Region Dalarna plans to join but time is short.

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Sofia Jarl (C), regional councillor in Dalarna, directs criticism at the government's plan for temporarily halved public transport fares.

The Social Democrats in Säter propose introducing app-controlled bus service in the municipality, inspired by a system in Värmland. Passengers would book buses on demand instead of following fixed timetables. The model has proven successful in Säffle and Grums.

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The Chamber of Deputies approved on Wednesday (13) the legal framework for urban public collective transport, which separates the cost of operations from the fare paid by passengers and expands financing sources. The text goes to presidential sanction after Senate approval in December 2024.

The Moderates have presented 70 billion kronor in savings to fund reforms in the next mandate period without tax increases. Finance Minister Elisabeth Svantesson identifies bureaucracy, aid and benefits as areas for cuts.

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After the election, Moderate Party's Carl Johan Sonesson promises Region Skåne will prioritize Skåne receiving its share of infrastructure funds and increased cross-strait commuting.

 

 

 

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