Stefan Löfven

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Stefan Löfven
S
File:Tallinn Digital Summit. Handshake Stefan Löfven and Jüri Ratas (36718147193) (cropped).jpg
Löfven in 2017
Prime Minister of Sweden
Assumed office
3 October 2014
Monarch Carl XVI Gustaf
Deputy Margot Wallström
Morgan Johansson
Åsa Romson
Isabella Lövin
Per Bolund
Preceded by Fredrik Reinfeldt
Leader of the Social Democratic Party
Assumed office
27 January 2012
General Secretary Carin Jämtin
Lena Rådström Baastad
Preceded by Håkan Juholt
Leader of the Opposition
In office
27 January 2012 – 3 October 2014
Monarch Carl XVI Gustaf
Deputy Carina Moberg
Mikael Damberg
Preceded by Håkan Juholt
Succeeded by Fredrik Reinfeldt
Personal details
Born Kjell Stefan Löfvén
(1957-07-21) 21 July 1957 (age 66)
Stockholm, Sweden
Political party Social Democrats
Spouse(s) Ulla Löfvén (m. 2003)
Residence Sager House
Signature Stefan Löfven's signature
Military service
Allegiance  Sweden
Service/branch Coat of arms of the Swedish Air Force Swedish Air Force
Years of service 1976–1977
Rank Private

Kjell Stefan Löfven (Swedish pronunciation: [ˈstěːfan lœˈveːn]; officially Löfvén; born 21 July 1957) is a Swedish politician serving as Prime Minister of Sweden since 2014 and Leader of the Swedish Social Democratic Party since 2012.[1]

After leaving school and completing his compulsory military service in the Air Force, Löfven was trained in welding and subsequently began a career as an active trade unionist. He rose to be elected as an ombudsman within the Swedish Metalworkers' Union (SMU) and was eventually elected as the first Chairman of IF Metall in January 2006, a major new trade union formed from a number of smaller unions, including the SMU, voting to merge.

After the resignation of Håkan Juholt, in January 2012, Löfven was unanimously selected by the executive board of the Social Democratic Party to replace him as the party's new leader. This also made Löfven the Leader of the Opposition, despite the fact that he did not have a seat in the Riksdag at the time.[2][3]

Löfven led the Social Democrats into the 2014 election. Despite initial opinion poll leads, the party only gained a single seat, but due to the poor performance of the governing Moderate Party, who lost 23 seats, Löfven was able to form a minority coalition government with the Green Party. He was appointed Prime Minister of Sweden on 3 October 2014. He secured a second term in the aftermath of the inconclusive 2018 election, which saw both main parties suffer losses; after a months-long impasse that set a new record for government formation, Löfven was able to secure abstentions from MPs belonging to the Centre Party, the Left Party and the Liberals, and was re-elected by the Riksdag in January 2019.

On 21 June 2021, Löfven lost a confidence motion in the Riksdag after the Left Party withdrew their support of the government, becoming Acting Prime Minister.[4]

Early life and education

Löfven was born 21 July 1957 in Aspudden, Stockholm, and his father died before he was born. He was placed in an orphanage before being looked after by a foster family from Sunnersta, Sollefteå, where he grew up. According to the agreement with this family, his birth mother would regain custody of him when she was able to; however, this did not happen.[5]

His foster father Ture Melander (1926–2003) was a lumberjack and later a factory worker, while his foster mother, Iris Melander (née Söderlund, 1929–2020),[6] worked as an in-home caregiver.[7] He studied at Sollefteå High School before starting a 48-week welding course at Arbetsmarknadsutbildningen (AMU, Unemployment Career Training) in Kramfors, and it is unclear whether he completed the course. Löfven later studied social work at Umeå University, but dropped out after a year and a half.[5]

Trade unionist

After completing his compulsory military service (as common soldier but as Munitions Systems specialist Conscript) in the Swedish Air Force at the Jämtland Air Force Wing (F 4) airbase 1976–77, Löfven began his career in 1978 as a welder at Hägglunds in Örnsköldsvik. Two years later, he was chosen as the group's union representative, and went on to hold a succession of union posts. In 1995, he started as an employed ombudsman in the Swedish Metalworkers' Union, working in the areas of contract negotiations and international affairs. In 2001, he was elected vice-chairman of the Metalworkers' Union; in November 2005 was elected as the first chairman of the newly formed trade union IF Metall.[2]

Political career

File:Stefan Löfven väljs till (S)-ledare 4.JPG
Löfven chosen as the Social Democratic Party's new leader, January 2012.

Löfven has been a member of the Social Democrats since the age of 13 and was active in SSU, the youth league, in his teens. Löfven was elected to the executive board of the Social Democrats in 2006, shortly after becoming chairman of trade union IF Metall.

Leader of the Social Democrats

In January 2012, following the resignation of Håkan Juholt, it was reported that Löfven was being considered as his successor. On 26 January 2012 the executive board nominated Löfven to become the party's new leader.[8][9][10] On 27 January 2012, Löfven was elected Leader in a party-room ballot.[11][12] Löfven was confirmed as party leader at the party's bi-annual congress on 4 April 2013.[13]

Löfven led his party through the 2014 European Parliament election where the Social Democrats retained their position as the largest party from Sweden in the European Parliament. However, the election results at 24.19% was a slightly inferior result than the result in the 2009 European Parliament election; the party's seats in the European Parliament was reduced from six to five[14] and the party's results was the lowest in an election at the national level since universal suffrage was introduced in 1921.

Prime Minister of Sweden (2014–present)

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Stefan Löfven and his Cabinet on 3 October 2014.

Löfven led his party through the 2014 general election, which resulted in a hung parliament.[15] Their election result of 31.0%, up from 30.7%, was slightly better than the result in the 2010 general election, but the result was also the party's second worst result in a general election to the Riksdag since universal suffrage was introduced in 1921.

He announced that he would form a minority coalition government consisting of his own party and the Green Party. On 2 October 2014, the Riksdag approved Löfven to become Prime Minister, and he took office on the following day, alongside his Cabinet.[16] The Social Democrats and the Green Party voted in favour of Löfven becoming Prime Minister, while close ally the Left Party abstained. The opposition Alliance-parties also abstained while the far-right Sweden Democrats voted against.

Löfven expressed a desire for bipartisan agreement between the Government and the opposition Alliance parties, and together they marked three areas where enhanced cooperation would be initiated. These three areas were the pension system, future energy development, and security and defence policy.

Domestic policy

File:Stefan Löfven in 2017.jpg
Löfven with flowers the day after the 2017 Stockholm truck attack
File:European Council (39036195872).jpg
Council of the European Union in December 2017

2014 budget crisis

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The Government's first budget was introduced to the Riksdag on 23 October 2014. The Left Party, which had been given influence over the budget, supported it; however, the non-socialist coalition, the Alliance, introduced a competing budget to the Riksdag on 10 November, as they had promised prior to the 2014 election, and the Sweden Democrats also introduced their own budget on the same day.

According to Riksdag practice, the parties support their own budget and if their budget falls they abstain from voting in the second round. However, on 2 December, the far-right Sweden Democrats announced that, after their own budget fell in the first voting round, they would support the Alliance parties' budget in the second voting round, thus giving that budget a majority in the Riksdag. This caused a crisis for the newly elected Government, which was exacerbated after their own budget was voted down by the Alliance parties and the Sweden Democrats on 3 December. Löfven immediately announced that he would call an early election, to be held on 22 March 2015.[17]

On 22 December, sources within the Riksdag leaked information that the Government was negotiating with the Alliance parties (the Moderate Party, Centre Party, Liberal People's Party and the Christian Democrats) to find a solution and to avoid a fresh election.[18] On 27 December, the Government and the Alliance parties held a joint press conference where they announced that the six parties had reached an agreement designed to ensure that the Government's budgets would be voted through in the second round of voting. The agreement was dubbed "Decemberöverenskommelsen" (December Agreement), was called historical by Löfven and was agreed to remain in force until the 2022 election, regardless of the results of the 2018 election.[19][not in citation given] Subsequently, Löfven announced that he no longer intended to call a snap election.[20] The centre-right Alliance withdrew from the agreements in 2015, but allowed the minority government to continue governing.

2015 European migrant crisis

In 2015, when a rising number of refugees and migrants[21] began to make the journey to the European Union to seek asylum, Europe was hit by a migrant crisis and Sweden received over 150,000 refugees in 2015.

During the autumn of 2015, the reception of refugees increased significantly to over 80,000 in two months and with terror group Islamic state rampage in the Middle East and the following attacks in Paris in November 2015, the Löfven cabinet significantly reverted Sweden's migration policy. On 23 October 2015, a bipartisan migration agreement was signed between the cabinet parties and the oppositional Moderate Party, the Centre Party, the Liberals and the Christian Democrats which included, among many other changes, temporary residency permits, total financial support requirements for family reunification and by law forcing municipalities to help with sheltering refugees in order to better distribute the burden across the country.[22]

On 12 November 2015, the cabinet introduced temporary border controls with immediate effect. The cabinet also proposed identity checks for every individual passing the Danish–Swedish border and closing of the Öresund Bridge, giving up the latter on 8 December 2015 after severe criticism.[23] On 17 December 2015, the Riksdag passed legislation to introduce identity checks with the votes 175 in favor, 39 against and 135 abstained.[24] On 4 January 2016, identity checks were introduced,[25] which meant that people who could not show a valid identity card, license or passport were not allowed to cross the border into Sweden, breaking with the Nordic Passport Union for the first time since 1954. Only twelve hours later the Danish Prime Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen announced that Denmark would implement temporary border controls along the German–Danish border with immediate effect as a consequence of Sweden's identity checks.[26]

2017 national security crisis

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. In July 2017, it became known to the public that Maria Ågren, a former Director-General of the Swedish Transport Agency, had been investigated after having cleared confidential information threatening the security of the country. The act was made in connection with a procurement of IT services with a non-governmental company in 2015. Among the cleared data were wanted vehicles, armored vehicles, the entire Swedish vehicles register, Swedish company secrets, the Swedish police criminal record- and suspicion registers, the Swedish state's internal security system and information about agents within the Swedish Military Intelligence and Security Service.[27]

Several days after it first became public, Löfven held a press conference on 24 July 2017 where he said that "there's been an accident at the Transport Agency".[28] Responsible cabinet minister Anna Johansson said she had been aware of the situation since January 2017 and blamed her former state secretary Erik Bromander for not having informed her earlier.[29] Cabinet ministers Anders Ygeman and Peter Hultqvist were reported to have been aware of the situation since the beginning of 2016, but chose not to inform the head of government.[30]

All parties within the Swedish opposition have opened up for a vote of confidence against cabinet ministers Anna Johansson, Anders Ygeman and Peter Hultqvist in order to remove them from office, with some parties calling for vote of confidence against Löfven as Prime Minister. Such a vote would, if supported by several parties, result in a removal of the Löfven cabinet.[31] In a press conference on 27 July Löfven announced a government reshuffling with Ygeman and Johansson resigning. He also stated that he would not resign himself over the incident.

Foreign policy

File:The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi with other leaders at India-Nordic Summit, in Stockholm, Sweden on April 17, 2018.JPG
Löfven and other Nordic leaders with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the India-Nordic Summit in Stockholm, 17 April 2018

In his Policy Statement, introduced to the Riksdag on 3 October 2014, Löfven said that his Government would recognise the State of Palestine. On 30 October 2014 the Government, through Minister for Foreign Affairs Margot Wallström, announced that the Government had decided to officially recognize the State of Palestine and explained the recognition by saying that it is the only solution to get to a two-state solution between Israel and the State of Palestine. Sweden is the first country within the European Union to do so after gaining membership (with other members, such as Poland, withholding recognition previously issued under Communist rule).[32] Israel called the move unconsidered and Israel recalled its ambassador, Isaac Bachman, following the recognition. Bachman returned to Sweden on 29 November 2014.[33] In December 2015, Löfven caused outrage in Israel by claiming that stabbing attacks are not considered terrorism by international standards; he later revised his comment, explaining that it is now known that the stabbing attacks are sanctioned by some terror organisations.[34]

File:Vladimir Putin and Stefan Löfven (2019-04-09) 01.jpg
Löfven with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the International Arctic Forum in Saint Petersburg, 9 April 2019

Löfven has said that the ongoing negotiations of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) between the European Union and the United States are very important and that it is in Sweden's interest that the managed trade agreement is implemented. However, he has said that the managed trade agreement shall not aggravate social conditions or human rights, which should be a high priority while negotiating.[35]

Löfven visited Iran in February 2017 and held talks with Ali Khamenei to improve economic relations.[36]

Löfven has supported closer security cooperation with Saudi Arabia.[37][38][39]

2018 general election

Stefan Löfven vowed to make the 2018 election a referendum about the welfare state.[40] Despite poor opinion polling, the Social Democrats fared better than initially expected, winning 28.26 percent of the popular vote. The red-green bloc ended up having a slight advantage in a hung parliament of 144 seats to 143 for the centre-right coalition Alliansen. Löfven announced after the election results that he intended to remain as Prime Minister and called for the "burial of bloc politics" in Sweden.[41]

However, on 25 September 2018, the Riksdag approved a motion of no confidence against Löfven with a 204–142 vote. Löfven remained in office as head of a caretaker government.[42] While it initially looked as though the Alliance would be able to form a government, the Alliance's leaders subsequently failed to secure enough votes or abstentions to replace him.

After a record-long period of government formation, Löfven was eventually re-elected as Prime Minister on 18 January 2019, after an agreement was struck between the Social Democrats, Greens, Liberals, and Centre Party, with the Left Party agreeing to abstain from voting against Löfven.[43] As a result, the minority coalition government of the Social Democrats and Green Party was reformed. The second Löfven Government was sworn in on 21 January.

2021 government crisis

In June 2021, the Left Party declared that they do not have confidence in Löfven and his cabinet, following alleged plans to scrap rent controls for new apartments. Subsequently, the Sweden Democrats put forward a motion of no confidence against Löfven and his cabinet. The motion is supported by other opposition parties, notably the Moderate Party and the Christian Democrats. Löfven called it irresponsible by the Left Party to throw the country into a “political crisis in the current situation”. The confidence vote was held on Monday, 21 June.[44]

The Riksdag voted in favor of the vote of no confidence, with 181 votes in favor, 109 against, and 51 abstaining.[45] The decision does not mean that the Löfven cabinet will be dismissed immediately. Löfven must decide within one week to either call a snap election or ask the speaker of the Riksdag to appoint a new prime minister.[46]

Personal life

Löfven enjoys sports and supports the ice hockey club Modo from Örnsköldsvik[47] and the football clubs Tottenham Hotspur[48] and GIF Sundsvall.[49] He is married to politician and trade unionist Ulla Löfven and has 2 stepchildren.[citation needed] Löfven himself has no biological children.[citation needed]

References

  1. "Swedish parliament confirms Social Democrat's Lofven as new PM." Archived 6 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine Reuters. Retrieved 3 October 2014.
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  21. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found."The majority of people arriving this year in Italy and Greece especially have been from countries mired in war or which otherwise are considered to be 'refugee-producing' and for whom international protection is needed. However, a smaller proportion is from elsewhere, and for many of these individuals, the term 'migrant' would be correct."
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  23. The Government drop plans to close the Öresund Bridge. Archived 6 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine (in Swedish)
  24. The Riksdag passes legislation on identity checks. Archived 3 February 2016 at the Wayback Machine (in Swedish)
  25. Sweden implements identity checks today. Archived 6 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine (in Swedish)
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  27. Confidential informations that may be cleared Archived 26 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine (in Swedish)
  28. Löfven about the IT-scandal: There's been an accident Archived 25 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine (in Swedish)
  29. Anna Johansson blames her former state secretary Archived 25 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine (in Swedish)
  30. Hultqvist has been aware of the situation since March 2016 Archived 25 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine (in Swedish)
  31. Political scientist: Ministers may be forced to resign Archived 25 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine (in Swedish)
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External links

  • Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons
Trade union offices
Preceded by Chair of IF Metall
2006–2012
Succeeded by
Anders Ferbe
Party political offices
Preceded by Leader of the Swedish Social Democratic Party
2012–present
Incumbent
Political offices
Preceded by Prime Minister of Sweden
2014–present
Incumbent
Order of precedence
Preceded by as Speaker of the Riksdag Swedish order of precedence
as Prime Minister
Succeeded by
Fredrik Wersäll
as Marshal of the Realm