Accessibility links

Breaking News

Sweden Gives Final Election Tally Amid Political Uncertainty


The Christian Democrats party leader Ebba Busch Thor speaks at the election party in Stockholm, Sweden, Sept. 9, 2018. Preliminary results of the 2018 Swedish parliamentary elections showed, Sept. 16, 2018, that Centre-Left bloc of the Social Democratic Party, the Green Party and Left party gained 40.7 percent of votes, narrowly heading in the race.
The Christian Democrats party leader Ebba Busch Thor speaks at the election party in Stockholm, Sweden, Sept. 9, 2018. Preliminary results of the 2018 Swedish parliamentary elections showed, Sept. 16, 2018, that Centre-Left bloc of the Social Democratic Party, the Green Party and Left party gained 40.7 percent of votes, narrowly heading in the race.

Swedish officials have officially confirmed the ruling Social Democratic Party won the most votes in the Sept. 9 general election despite a record low result and the far-right Sweden Democrats getting a big boost amid growing anti-immigration sentiment.

Election officials presented the final tally Sunday that showed Prime Minister Stefan Lofven's Social Democrats getting 28.3 percent, the center-right Moderate Party 19.8 percent and the Sweden Democrats 17.5 percent.

Neither the left-leaning bloc led by the Social Democrats nor the Moderates-led opposition, center-right bloc managed to secure a governing majority in the 349-seat parliament.

The result means Sweden will face weeks of political uncertainty amid expected government formation talks.

Both blocs have refused to cooperate with the Sweden Democrats, a potential kingmaker in Cabinet formation talks. Voter turnout was 87.2 percent.

XS
SM
MD
LG