February 13, 2012
Published: 19 Aug 10 08:24 CET | Double click on a word to get a translation
Online: http://www.thelocal.se/28448/20100819/
Elections in Sweden tend to be decided over issues rather than candidates, but with the upcoming September 19th vote for the first time pitting two blocs against each other, personal politics are playing an unprecedented role, writes AFP's Rita Devlin Marier.
What do you think? Leave your comment below.
A Stockholm woman fed up with male passengers on public transport taking up the space of women sitting next to them, has started a blog snapping secret pics of straddle-legged commuters and posting them on the internet. READ (11 COMMENTS) »
A suburb of Mjällby, southern Sweden, known by locals as ‘Negro Village’ for forty years, will be changing its name after a storm of recent attention. READ (4 COMMENTS) »
A 27-year-old German man has been living at the Gothenburg Landvetter airport for two months having no wish to return to Germany and nowhere to go in Sweden. READ (5 COMMENTS) »
Every second Swede is at risk of developing dementia, according to a new study from Umeå University, which concentrated on the 85+ population in northern Sweden. READ »
After a 28-year-old woman was pulled off her bicycle and raped by an unidentified assailant in Malmö over the weekend, and police are fearing it could be the work of a budding serial rapist. READ (9 COMMENTS) »
Families of children in Sweden suffering from narcolepsy caused by vaccination for the swine flu can expect some form of compensation, Swedish health minister Göran Hägglund said on Sunday in response to new calls for help from parents. READ (1 COMMENT) »
The new leader of the Social Democrats Stefan Löfven has indicated he's ready to negotiate with the government over the future of nuclear power despite a previous party decision to phase out nuclear energy in Sweden. READ (1 COMMENT) »
One in five Swedes believes that people rise from the grave after they've died, a new survey has shown. READ (9 COMMENTS) »

As diverse as Sweden is, there are a few societal norms that are distinctly Swedish. Understanding a handful of them will hopefully prepare you culturally before you relocate. When you're invited home to a Swede, you better be on time and take your shoes off, writes expat Lola Akinmade-Åkerström. Read more »
Sweden is a country where almost everyone can speak English. So why bother to learn Swedish? Edina Varnagy from Hungary managed with English for a whole year but then found that Swedish could open doors – to a job, a social life and greater understanding. Read more »
"The ice dripped in the winter sun. It was the first day when the light had been intense enough to cause dripping in the sunlight. To hear it was an extraordinary wakeup call. The cycle was happening again as it always does, always will (or so we think). I imagined that on my summer island, the bees..." READ »
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fin
adjective
Fin means anyhting from sweet to proper. When someone says, Du är så fin it's quite a compliment.
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I think most of the "popularity" of the moderates at the moment comes from the fear of ending up like Greeks or Spain due to a Socialist gov. spending too much. So they preffer the Moderates cos somehow they got the rep of saving SE from the crisis, but the truth might be that SE saved it self cos it has a strong economy from the begining of it.
In nearly the rest of EU people live like slaves, with low salaries and expensive housing. They can only pay the housing, food and that's it. They are slaves of the banks with the TV as only fun. No even the theory of bread and circus applies any more cos the circus is missing.
Sweden has manage to control the beat and play the game without ensalaving their people and that's what's needed to keep the same way.
The question is who can do it? Personaly I find the Social Democrats closer to that middle point with the moderates just about there and this is reflected in the last polls where they are racing neck to neck, while some others go for other alternatives they think mught bring some true change, but at the end of the day SE should be happy to be where it is cos the only good change would be a change of the whole global system.
I have to disagree. The downfall of SocDem has nothing to do with Greece or Spain. In fact, most Swedes don't even know these countries are run by socialist governments. The SocDem party under Göran Persson became complacent. They didn't fulfill half of the promises made during elections. The way I see it, it's only fair that Persson was replaced by Reinfeldt in 2006. If a party fails the people, then it's to be replaced, regardless of ideological premises. It's like saying LeBron James is the best basketball player in NBA. However if he can't win a championship title then he's still nobody.
Swedes are much like "slaves" under the inefficient infrastructures built by SocDem. The tax is high. Housing is not only expensive but inaccessible. In cities like Uppsala people have to wait for years in the line to get an apartment. For college students, numerous are forced to drop out each year because they can't find a place to live. And don't even get me started with healthcare. The global system won't change, so we have to adapt to whatever happens outside our borders. To me the center-left bloc is doing exactly the opposite. I dislike Mona Sahlin not because of her personality, but her lack of constructive ideas to transform the society. There are more urgent issues to solve than hiring a few metro-butlers.
In 2006 the only candidate for the job. No-one else wanted it (Margit Wallström) and some weren't allowed it (Per Nuder).
1) Even Göran Persson thought that she was no good.
2) The Toblerone affair.
3) She thinks that it is "cool" to pay taxes, but, when she had had own business, she made sure that she didn't pay so much in tax.
4) She rates OK as oppostion leader, (good one-liners) but drags long behind Reinfeldt as leader of a block (no policies).
5) She has had 4 years' time to come up with alternatives for the Alliance policies but has still not presented a plausible alternative.
To put it simply: A LOSER.
Wow, spending billions on no-bid contracts for buddies' companies is not enough to take down a politician in America. Even if Sweden is moving slightly to the right, it is still much better and less corrupt than the business-run United States.
I am so tired of seeing these people now all over the TV screen saying what they will do if they win. If they were unable to fix the problems in 60 years I can not see why they would be able to fix it in one mandate period.
Politics is the art of deceiving the people into thinking they have a choice.
In the last 50 years of democracy has the gap between rich and poor diminished?
Has life for the bottom 90% improved, and I don't mean inventions because inventions happen more quickly without government interference.
Life hasn't improved for the bottom 90%, up to the eyes in lifelong debt to maintain a lifestyle for their family in a 2 room 50 sq mt apartment. Suffering oppressive regulation, constant interference and with obscene fines for heinous victimless crimes such as parking without a ticket.
Debt slaves until the day they die, unless the system of "money as debt" is overturned.