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Infographics: Sweden's new political landscapes

The far-right, anti-immigration Sweden Democrats (SD) could become the second-biggest party in September’s parliamentary elections, threatening the two traditional party blocs in the government.
By Republica

The far-right, anti-immigration Sweden Democrats (SD) could become the second-biggest

party in September’s parliamentary elections, threatening the two traditional party blocs in the government. The centre-left red-green bloc and centre-right Alliance have each enjoyed 37-40 per cent support in opinion polls -- far from a majority of their own. Now, the SDs are on 19 per cent in polls and could gain as many as 70 MPs in the 349-seat Riksdag.


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The isolation of the SDs has been a deliberate policy of the mainstream parties. When the current centre-left Swedish government called in all parliamentary parties to discuss immigration in 2015 — at the peak of the migration crisis when Sweden received 163,000 asylum seekers — it pointedly failed to invite the SDs.

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