The new C-leader has something the Liberals missing
For a long time, the Center Party had a reality -absent position in Swedish politics. Or more precisely from the same moment, the Liberals unplugged the January agreement with S, MP and C and opened to be part of a government that takes support from SD.
Prior to the election in 2022, Annie Lööf reiterated to form government in what she called the broad center, and closing the Left Party and the Swedish Democrats outside. The problem was that no one else in Swedish politics was interested. In the end, she was forced to choose the former enemy S.
With a failed Election results and white spots in previously strong brackets have tried to find their way, but are often blamed for not waking up and taking the new position.
When Muharrem Demirok made an attempt, it became the death knell for his party leadership. Giving his stated support to Magdalena Andersson as prime ministerial candidate was nothing the entire center party was ready for.
Now the prospect of the Center and the new party leader Anna-Karin Hatt suddenly looks better than in a long time, and it is mainly thanks to two other parties in the Riksdag: the Liberals and the Left Party.
Just as the inner C-fighting had calmed down, the Liberals took over the role of Parliament’s chaos party. After the liberal power jumps at the beginning of the year, Johan Pehrson finally thanked himself.
Now the prospect of the Center and the new party leader Anna-Karin Hatt suddenly looks better than in a long time.
If nothing changes L’s new party leader sits in an uncomfortable, not to say impossible, seat on the government issue.
The Liberals swear not to be part of a government with SD, or even release one. A majority of the Liberals are also not interested in leaving the block boundary again. At the same time, both M and KD signal that the parties are ready to admit the Swedish Democrats into office.
If the time parties would gain a majority, despite today’s gloomy opinion figures and the difficulties for all governments to be re -elected, the Liberals end up on the replacement bench – if you stick to today’s commitments.
And the Left Party then, What do they have to do with the thing?
Nooshi Dadgostar’s government school has been visited by financier Jacob Wallenberg, former Finance Minister Anders Borg and former Foreign Minister Carl Bildt. But not a Social Democrat has crossed the threshold. There are reasons for that.
S does not trust fully on the left party, and if you listen to the top tier, the answer is the same who you talk to: There will be no ministerial posts on the left at an election win. The latest tours with MP Lorena Delgado Varas and the anti -Semitic image she shared in social media consolidates that attitude.
All in all, it gives Anna-Karin Hat, unlike the new L leader, a rather reasonable chance of ministerial posts. The question is whether she dares to choose before the election.