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Swedish party suggests smaller minority govt to get past impasse
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Swedish party suggests smaller minority govt to get past impasse

Reuters • October 13, 2018, 00:07:50 IST
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By Daniel Dickson and Niklas Pollard STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - Sweden’s largest centre-right party said on Friday it was prepared to form a government without other parties in its bloc, in an attempt to clear a political impasse left by last month’s inconclusive election. Swedish Moderates leader Ulf Kristersson said the other parties could support his cabinet from outside government - in an apparent bid to get around their refusal to work directly with nationalists who currently hold the balance of power. Other members of the centre-right Alliance bloc did not comment on the plan - which was quickly rejected by other groups.

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Swedish party suggests smaller minority govt to get past impasse

Swedish party suggests smaller minority govt to get past impasse

By Daniel Dickson and Niklas Pollard

STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - Sweden’s largest centre-right party said on Friday it was prepared to form a government without other parties in its bloc, in an attempt to clear a political impasse left by last month’s inconclusive election.

Swedish Moderates leader Ulf Kristersson said the other parties could support his cabinet from outside government - in an apparent bid to get around their refusal to work directly with nationalists who currently hold the balance of power.

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Other members of the centre-right Alliance bloc did not comment on the plan - which was quickly rejected by other groups.

If the scheme fails, the centre-left will likely get a chance to form a government next week. Failing that, the country could face fresh elections.

The plan followed weeks of fraught negotiations after neither Kristersson’s centre-right Alliance bloc nor a grouping of centre-left parties won enough votes on Sept. 9 to form a majority.

The vote left the anti-immigration Sweden Democrats, which has been shunned by all other parties, holding the balance of power in a deeply divided Riksdag.

GRAPHIC: https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/rngs/SWEDEN-ELECTION/0100808Q0J6/SWEDEN-ELECTION%20GOVERNMENT-01.jpg

Kristersson published a long Facebook post proposing that his party form a government which other members of the centre-right Alliance block could support in votes but not have to formally join.

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“Neither the Sweden Democrats nor the Left Party would be given influence over the government’s political direction,” he wrote.

Nevertheless, the Sweden Democrats or left-wing parties would at least have to agree not vote against any such minority government for it to survive.

None of the other members of Alliance members - the Centre Party, the Liberals and the Christian Democrats - commented on the proposal.

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Several members of the centre-left Social Democrats, which is currently in a caretaker government, dismissed the plan, saying it would depend on support from the far right.

“Kristersson is showing his true colours,” Justice and Interior Minister Morgan Johansson said in a tweet.

The Sweden Democrats, which wants substantial curbs on immigration, also appeared to dismiss the scheme.

“It feels completely unreasonable that we would allow a government that clearly declares that we won’t get any influence what-so-ever,” party leader Jimmie Akesson. “That will of course not happen.”

(Additional reporting by Johan Sennero; writing by Niklas Pollard; Editing by Toby Chopra and Andrew Heavens)

This story has not been edited by Firstpost staff and is generated by auto-feed.

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