Sweden's Social Democrat Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson will officially resign fr" />

Magdalena Andersson: Sweden’s PM will resign today, after conceding election to right-wing

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Sweden’s Social Democrat Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson will officially resign from her post on Thursday, after she accepted defeat in a close-fought election, handing victory to the four-party right-wing opposition bloc, and giving them the first go at forming a new government.

Sweden's Prime Minister and Social Democratic party leader Magdalena Andersson, 11 September 2022
Sweden’s Prime Minister and Social Democratic party leader Magdalena Andersson,
11 September 2022
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Copyright  Jonas Ekströmer / TT News Agency via AP

With 99% of the vote counted, only a handful of ballots remain unassigned, but Andersson, who became Sweden’s first woman PM only last year, said the results showed her opponents have won.

“I will therefore… ask the speaker to be relieved of my post,” Andersson told journalists at a press conference on Wednesday.

Although Andersson’s Social Democrats emerged as the biggest single party after Sunday’s vote, the other parties on the left didn’t have a majority of seats overall.

The far-right anti-immigrant Sweden Democrats won the second biggest share of the vote, and will now seek to form a government with the conservative Moderates, Christian Democrats and Liberals, who between them have secured a slender three-seat majority in the Riksdag, the Swedish Parliament, with 176 seats to 173.

The result still has to be officially confirmed.

The election marks a watershed in Swedish politics with the Sweden Democrats, shunned by all the major parties when they first entered parliament in 2010, on the threshold of gaining influence over government policy.

Sweden’s next prime minister is likely to be Ulf Kristersson, the leader of the Moderates. Although his party only finished in third place – which would normally be considered an embarrassment for the traditional biggest conservative party – Kristersson will most probably become PM as the other parties in their new coalition do not want to see Sweden Democrats leader Jimmie Åkesson in the top job.

Åkesson said on Wednesday night his party would be “a constructive and driving force in this work” of rebuilding safety in Sweden, adding it was “time to put Sweden first”.