Wednesday, November 24, 2021

Sweden's 1st female prime minister quits hours later following budget defeat

Magdalena Andersson's resignation comes after coalition

 partner left the 2-party minority government

Social Democratic Party Leader Magdalena Andersson attends a news conference after the budget vote in the Swedish parliament in Stockholm Wednesday. Hours after being approved as Sweden's prime minister, Andersson resigned after the government's budget proposal was rejected in favour of one presented by the opposition. (Pontus Lundahl/TT/The Associated Press)

Hours after being tapped as Sweden's prime minister, Magdalena Andersson resigned Wednesday after suffering a budget defeat in parliament and coalition partner the Greens left the two-party minority government.

The government's own budget proposal was rejected in favour of one presented by the opposition that includes the right-wing populist Sweden Democrats, Sweden's third-largest party that is rooted in a neo-Nazi movement. The vote was 154-143 in favour of the opposition's budget proposal.

Andersson, leader of the Social Democratic Party, decided it was best to step down from the post more than seven hours after she made history by becoming the first woman to lead the country.

"For me, it is about respect, but I also do not want to lead a government where there may be grounds to question its legitimacy," Andersson told a news conference.

Andersson, who was finance minister before briefly becoming prime minister, informed parliamentary Speaker Andreas Norlén that she is still interested in leading a Social Democratic one-party government.

Norlén, the speaker of Sweden's 349-seat parliament, says he will contact Sweden's eight party leaders "to discuss the situation." On Thursday, he will announce the road ahead.

Andersson said that "a coalition government should resign if a party chooses to leave the government. Despite the fact that the parliamentary situation is unchanged, it needs to be tried again."

Sweden's Green Party spokespeople Per Bolund, left, and Marta Stenevi address a news conference after the budget vote on Wednesday. (Pontus Lundahl/TT News Agency/AFP/Getty Images)

Budget defeat prompts Greens to pull support

Even though the Green Party pulled its support for her government, it said it is prepared to stand behind Andersson in a new vote to tap a prime minister.

But the Greens said it was in the best interests of the party to pull support for her after the budget defeat.

"We have a united party behind us saying we cannot sit in government that implements a policy (the Sweden Democrats) negotiated. We must look our voters in the eye and feel pride," said Marta Stenevi, Green Party spokesperson as the party chose to resign from the government.

Per Bolund, the other Green Party spokesperson, said "that is something we deeply regret."

Earlier in the day, Andersson said she could "govern the country with the opposition's budget."

The approved budget was based on the government's own proposal but of the 74 billion kronor ($10.3 billion) that the government wanted to spend on reforms, just over 20 billion kronor ($2.8 billion) will be redistributed next year, Swedish broadcaster SVT said.

The approved budget aims at reducing taxes, increased salaries for police officers and more money to different sectors of Sweden's judiciary system.

Earlier in the day, lawmakers applauded after the vote in which Andersson was appointed Sweden's new prime minister. (Erik Simander/TT News Agency/The Associated Press)

Milestone marked earlier

Andersson's appointment as prime minister had marked a milestone for Sweden, viewed for decades as one of Europe's most progressive countries when it comes to gender relations, but which had yet to have a woman in the top political post.

Andersson had been tapped to replace Stefan Lofven as party leader and prime minister, roles he relinquished earlier this year.

Earlier in the day, 117 legislators voted yes to Andersson, 174 rejected her appointment while 57 abstained and one legislator was absent.

Under Sweden's constitution, prime ministers can be named and govern as long as a parliamentary majority — a minimum of 175 legislators — is not against them.

Sweden's next general election is scheduled for Sept. 11.

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