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Sweden: Liberalism in Trouble

Will Sweden trade its liberal leanings for a populist push in forthcoming elections?

For years Sweden has been praised for its generous welfare state and the welcoming hand it held out to refugees. But things are changing. Sweden is approaching the end of its most closely fought election in decades. Polls predict that the long dominant Social Democrats will get the largest share of the vote but not enough to govern alone. As in other European countries, significant numbers of the old working class are turning to an anti-EU anti-immigrant party. The Sweden Democrats are socially conservative, talking tough on immigration, and helped by recent criminal incidents that some are pinning on immigrants. They could get enough support to influence the country's future. President Trump has long been tweeting about Sweden, claiming "large scale immigration" there isn't working. But what's the evidence? Is Sweden suffering from an epidemic of crime caused by immigrants? Has it failed to assimilate the people it welcomed in? Or are these at best half-truths deployed in a tough election campaign? Ritula Shah and a panel of experts discuss whether Sweden has turned its back on its social democratic past?

Available now

50 minutes

Last on

Sat 8 Sep 2018 11:06GMT

Photo

Police face-off againstΜύfar-right sympathisers demonstrating against migrants in central Stockholm by AFP/Jonathan Nackstrand/Getty Images

Contributors:

Nasra Ali - Chair of social democratic students of Sweden

Ann-Cathrine Jungar - Associate Professor Sodertorn University

Rouzbeh ParsiΜύ- Senior lecturer in Human Rights Studies at Lund University.

Markus Wiechel - Foreign Affairs spokesman, Sweden Democrats

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Broadcasts

  • Fri 7 Sep 2018 08:06GMT
  • Fri 7 Sep 2018 17:06GMT
  • Fri 7 Sep 2018 23:06GMT
  • Sat 8 Sep 2018 03:06GMT
  • Sat 8 Sep 2018 11:06GMT

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