List of political parties in Sweden

This article lists political parties in Sweden.

Sweden has a multi-party system with numerous political parties, in which parties often have a smaller chance of gaining power alone, and in the event a majority is not reached, can choose to work with each other to form coalition governments.

National parties edit

The letter(s) after each Swedish party name are the abbreviations commonly used in the Swedish media.

Parties with official representation edit

Parties with representation in the Riksdag and/or European Parliament:

PartyAbbr.LeaderIdeologyPolitical positionMPsMEPsEP group
Swedish Social Democratic Party
Socialdemokratiska arbetarpartiet
S/SAPMagdalena AnderssonSocial democracy
Democratic socialism
Centre-left
107 / 349
5 / 21
S&D
Sweden Democrats
Sverigedemokraterna
SDJimmie ÅkessonRight-wing to far-right
73 / 349
3 / 21
ECR
Moderate Party
Moderata samlingspartiet
MUlf KristerssonLiberal conservatismCentre-right
68 / 349
4 / 21
EPP
Left Party
Vänsterpartiet
VNooshi DadgostarLeft-wing
24 / 349
1 / 21
GUE/NGL
Centre Party
Centerpartiet
CMuharrem DemirokLiberalism
Agrarianism (Nordic)
Centre to centre-right
24 / 349
2 / 21
Renew
Christian Democrats
Kristdemokraterna
KDEbba BuschCentre-right to right-wing
19 / 349
2 / 21
EPP
Green Party
Miljöpartiet de Gröna
MPDaniel Helldén
Märta Stenevi
Centre-left
18 / 349
3 / 21
Greens/EFA
Liberals
Liberalerna
LJohan PehrsonCentre-right
16 / 349
1 / 21
Renew
  • According to a threshold rule, any one particular party must receive at least 4% of the votes to be allocated a seat in the Riksdag.
  • Any party having broken the 1% threshold in the last two EU-parliament or Riksdag elections respectively will have their ballots printed and distributed by the authorities.[1]

Minor parties edit

Defunct and historical parties edit

Joke parties edit

Regional and local parties edit

The following is a list of currently active[a] and defunct (†) parties on the local (municipal and regional) levels.

Parties that are:

  • active only at the regional levels are listed in bold
  • active at both the regional and municipal levels are bold and are marked with an asterisk (*)
  • simultaneously campaigning on the national level are underlined

Blekinge edit

Dalarna edit

Gävleborg edit

Halland edit

Jämtland edit

Jönköping edit

Kalmar edit

Kronoberg edit

Norrbotten edit

Scania edit

Södermanland edit

Stockholm edit

Uppsala edit

Västerbotten edit

Västernorrland edit

Västra Götaland edit

Örebro edit

Östergötland edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ For the purposes of this article, a party qualifies as "active" if they have campaigned for a legislature since 2014.

References edit

  1. ^ "Putting out ballot papers". Valmyndigheten. 20 April 2018.
  2. ^ "Internetfenomenet som fick Hanif Bali i blåsväder". www.expressen.se (in Swedish). Retrieved 18 November 2019.

External links edit