Sweden’s Prime Minister loses confidence vote

21 June 2021, 11:14

Sweden’s Prime Minister Stefan Lofven
Sweden Politics. Picture: PA

Stefan Lofven has become Sweden’s first government leader to lose a vote of confidence.

Sweden’s Prime Minister Stefan Lofven has lost a no-confidence vote making him the country’s first government leader ever to lose such a motion.

The vote, which took place amid a housing crisis and skyrocketing property prices, was initiated on Tuesday by the small Left Party – an ally of the minority government that is not in the two-party centre-left coalition but had provided the votes to pass legislation.

Plans to deregulate Sweden’s housing market because of accelerating price increases that took place during the pandemic are at the centre of a controversy that sparked the Left Party to lose confidence and vote against Mr Lofven.

Sweden has strict regulations on rents aimed at maintaining affordable prices in larger cities. But this disincentives property developers from building new homes for the rental market. People needing to rent a home can find themselves waiting for years for a contract, and buying property is increasingly hard amid soaring home prices.

Nooshi Dadgostar, leader of the Left Party
Nooshi Dadgostar, leader of the Left Party (Anders Wiklund / TT via AP)

However, the Left Party fears that deregulating the rental market will lead to rapid price rises and deeper segregation between rich and poor people.

It is unclear what will happen next in Sweden. Mr Lofven had said he wanted to wait for the outcome of the no-confidence vote and then “think through what is best for Sweden”.

Mr Lofven, who has been Sweden’s Social Democratic prime minister since 2014, said he would either call a snap election or become the head of a caretaker government.

He has one week to decide what to do.

Over the weekend, Mr Lofven held last-minute meetings seeking to secure a majority in parliament for his proposed rent reforms. On Sunday, he sought to soften the reforms by inviting landlords and tenant organisations for talks.

But the leader of the Left Party Nooshi Dadgostar stood by its decision to oppose Mr Lofven and said his effort was “a political show”.

“We have done something that is perceived as unusual in politics … kept our word,” she said.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Released prisoners are welcomed by family

Myanmar releases thousands of prisoners to mark Independence Day

Fire department truck

Hundreds of animals killed in Dallas shopping centre fire

Taiwan’s President Lai Ching-te waves

Taiwan says China redoubling efforts to undermine democracy with disinformation

Rudy Giuliani speaks to the media outside Manhattan federal court

Rudy Giuliani insists he is not hiding assets at contempt hearing

Donald Trump appears at Manhattan criminal court during jury deliberations in his criminal hush money trial in New York on May 30 2024

Judge sets Trump’s sentencing date in hush money case but signals no jail time

A British citizen was among the victims of the New Orleans attack

'Wonderful' Brit, 31, killed in New Orleans terror attack identified as devastated family pay tribute

Rudy Giuliani speaking to the media

Rudy Giuliani appears at contempt hearing over election case judgment

A British citizen was among the victims of the New Orleans attack

British citizen among 14 killed in New Orleans terror attack - as victim confirmed to have died from 'blunt force injuries'

Military personnel walk down Bourbon Street in New Orleans

New Orleans attacker had suspected bomb materials at home, officials say

Fifteen people have died and at least 35 were injured in the attack

New Orleans terror suspect ‘wasn’t a violent person’ but got ‘radicalised’, says half-brother

Trump's sentencing hearing is scheduled for January 10.

Donald Trump to be sentenced on January 10 in hush money trial as guilty verdict upheld

House Speaker Mike Johnson at the Capitol in Washington

Republican Mike Johnson re-elected House speaker after dramatic floor vote

The 31-year-old star died on 16 October after falling from the third-floor balcony of a hotel in Buenos Aires

Waiter accused of supplying Liam Payne with cocaine before fatal fall arrested

A destroyed part of Gaza City as seen from southern Israel

Israeli strikes kill at least 42 in Gaza as ceasefire talks to resume in Qatar

Bottles of alcohol on shelves at a bar in Houston

Surgeon general calls for new label on alcohol to warn Americans of cancer risk

European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen addresses a media conference at the end of an EU summit in Brussels in December

European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen has ‘severe pneumonia’