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Who is Sweden's Social Democratic Prime Minister Stefan Löfven?

AFP/The Local
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Who is Sweden's Social Democratic Prime Minister Stefan Löfven?
Prime Minister Stefan Löfven on the campaign trail. Photo: Sören Andersson/TT

While Stefan Löfven concentrates on keeping one of Europe's last centre-left governments in power, he faces criticism both from the left and the right.

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Sweden's Social Democratic Prime Minister Stefan Löfven has probably never stood so alone: roasted by the right for leaving the door wide open to asylum-seekers and lambasted by the left for later slamming it shut.

Either way, like German Chancellor Angela Merkel he has faced some hard decisions on immigration and lost support in his own camp since shutting Sweden's borders at the end of 2015, after taking more than 240,000 asylum seekers since 2014.

At 61, Löfven, a former metal worker and union leader, faces the biggest challenge of his career: to keep one of Europe's last centre-left governments in power.

As the son of a poor single mother who came into politics after rising through the ranks of the trade union movement, he can truthfully claim to understand the challenges faced by "ordinary" voters.


Born in Stockholm in 1957, poverty forced his mother to give him up when he was 10 months old to a foster family in Sollefteå, 500 kilometres north of the capital, where the father was a factory worker. He became a welder and spent 15 years working in a defence factory, joining the union in the early 1980s and ending up as head of the metal workers' union Metall from 2006 to 2012.

Boxer's nose

"I'm sometimes described as a right-wing socialist because I think industry is important. I find that very bizarre," retorts the politician with the square build and nose of a boxer to those who accuse him of turning his back on the party's base.

Ahead of Sweden's September 9th legislative elections, he has tried to court everyone from the left to the centre, one eye firmly on the thorny negotiations likely to lie ahead to form a government.

His Social Democrats, which have dominated Swedish politics since the 1930s, are leading in the polls, but they look set to post a record low score, just ahead of the far-right Sweden Democrats and conservative Moderates, who are battling for second place.

Migration U-turn

Despite some internal dissension, "Stefan Löfven has managed to keep the party united, his leadership isn't questioned," Ulf Bjereld, a University of Gothenburg political science professor and a member of the Social Democrats' executive committee, told AFP.

After allowing large numbers of asylum seekers into the country after 2014, Löfven announced on November 24th, 2015, that Sweden was aligning its asylum policy with the European Union's minimal levels, cracking down on family reunifications among other things.

"It pains me to say that Sweden can no longer take in asylum seekers at the same high level... Sweden needs some breathing room," Löfven told a news conference, his then Greens Party deputy prime minister Åsa Romson at his side, tearing up.

Just two months earlier he had said: "My Europe doesn't build walls, my Europe takes in refugees."

"Even Angela Merkel in Germany had to do a U-turn on immigration. But no leader in Europe did an about-face as brutal as Stefan Löfven," wrote Sweden's paper of reference Dagens Nyheter in May.

'Genuine'

Löfven's detractors say his stance on immigration and integration is "naive" and "irresponsible". To counter that he has taken a hard line, repeatedly stressing that new arrivals in Sweden have both "rights and responsibilities".

And with cars being torched and gangs settling scores in Sweden's disadvantaged suburbs, he regularly calls for "law and order" – a phrase more commonly used by the right-wing.

Seen by some as a poor orator who lacks charisma, he is nevertheless popular with many Swedes who see him as "genuine". A recent Skop poll showed a majority of Swedes would rather break bread with him than with his Swedish Moderate Party challenger Ulf Kristersson.

He and his wife Ulla – who lead the sort of simple, modest lifestyle seen as a virtue in Sweden – were recently featured in the pages of a celebrity magazine, and on television, an unusual move for Social Democratic politicians.

If elected to a second term, Löfven is likely to have to contend with a downturn in the domestic and international economy, as forecast by experts after Sweden's long period of growth.

Article written by AFP's Gaël Branchereau

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