Ousting of Löfven Norlén was elected the
Speaker of the Riksdag on 24 September 2018, following the first sitting of the
Riksdag since the
elections with 203 to 145 votes against
Åsa Lindestam, who became First Deputy Speaker. Prime Minister Stefan Löfven lost the motion of no confidence against him and his cabinet on 25 September 2018, with 142 members of parliament voting to retain Löfven's cabinet and 204 voting against. Löfven stated in a subsequent press conference that he would not step down as Social Democratic party leader and that he was willing to partake in talks regarding the formation of a new government, but insisted that it was ultimately up to the
Speaker of the Riksdag. Löfven also stated that he found it completely unbelievable that the Alliance could ever form a government if they keep their promise of not co-operating with the Sweden Democrats. 2 days later party negotiations for forming a new government commenced. and on 2 October the Speaker of the House,
Andreas Norlén, announced that he had tasked Moderate Party leader Ulf Kristersson with forming a government. On 14 October, Ulf Kristersson held a press conference, stating that he had notified the Speaker of the Riksdag that he is giving up his attempt at forming a government. Kristersson maintained that he still has the intention of becoming prime minister and leading a government consisting of "the entire Alliance, solely the Moderates or those Alliance parties that would be willing to enter into an Alliance government led by myself." He informed the Speaker of the Riksdag that "there is currently no basis for any of these options at this time". The reason for the failure was that the Alliance had fewer seats than the
red-greens, so the Sweden Democrats (or the Social Democrats) must support government propositions or they would fail: such need for Sweden Democrat support was not tolerated by the Centre and Liberal parties. They proposed a government including the Social Democrats, which the Moderates rule out. Stefan Löfven was tasked with forming a government on 15 October 2018, giving him two weeks to construct a stable government coalition. On 29 October, Löfven announced that he too had failed to create a stable government. Norlén then took over the process of government formation directly, though he did not announce a deadline. As the budget must be renewed by 15 November, Swedish Government's finance ministry has been working on a "politically neutral" emergency bill that would avert a second budget crisis if the government is not formed by then.
First Riksdag vote On 5 November, Norlén nominated Moderate leader Ulf Kristersson to lead the government. A nomination, in this case, means that the Riksdag will have a confidence vote, rather than merely continuing talks. Centre leader Annie Lööf was critical of the decision, as she had expected to become the third person tasked with forming a stable government coalition. Lööf was also critical of the Moderates as well as the Christian Democrats, accusing them of taking her opportunity of forming a government away (the Speaker is a Moderate), thus disrupting an already fragile
Alliance. The vote was set to take place during the week of 12 November, before the budget debate on 15 November. On 14 November, Kristersson's proposed minority government of Moderates + Christian Democrats supported by Sweden Democrats failed the Riskdag confidence vote 195–154. The Center and Liberal parties broke their alliance, as they refused to accept a government that relied on the Sweden Democrats. The vote was marked the first time a candidate for prime minister was rejected by the Riksdag since the abolition of the bicameral legislature in 1971. The Swedish constitution stipulates that the Riksdag will have four chances to pass a confidence vote, after which a new election will be mandatory.
Second Riksdag vote and budget vote On 15 November, Norlén tasked Lööf with forming a government, and gave her a one-week extendable deadline. Norlén did not announce a date for a second Riksdag vote, stating only that there would be "one or more votes this autumn." Lööf stated that she wanted to construct a centrist government, and that she wanted the centre-right (M, KD, and L) and the centre-left (S and MP) to agree to negotiate with her about the possibility of forming a new government, excluding the parties that are far-left (V) and far-right (SD). Lööf announced on 22 November that she would concede her attempt to form a government, blaming the Moderates and Social Democrats for being unwilling to compromise. The next day, Norlén nominated Löfven to be the prime minister, without a formally-set date for the vote. He also set the budget vote to occur on 12 December. The Centre Party stated that they may back Löfven (and thus give the red-greens 31 seats, exactly enough for a majority) if Löfven's cabinet agrees to some economic compromises. Soon after, the Liberal Party head Jan Björklund made a similar statement, although the party was internally divided on the matter. On 12 December, Norlén formally nominated Löfven. As the Centre and Liberals had stated earlier in the week that they were not satisfied with Löfven's negotiations, the outcome of the vote remained uncertain. On the same day, the provisional budget was submitted by the caretaker government, but was defeated by an alternative budget created by the Moderates and Christian Democrats, as the Sweden Democrats supported it, and the Centre and Liberal parties decided to abstain from the final vote. On 14 December, Löfven lost the confidence vote.
Third Riksdag vote and re-election of Löfven Norlén stated after the vote that he would restart negotiations between the parties, while at the same time preparing for the possibility of a snap election. Norlén then created a finalized timeline for forming a government, and urged Kristersson and Löfven to find a compromise. Without nominating a new candidate, he set the next vote for a prime minister on 16 January, and a final vote on 23 January if the first vote fails. If neither vote succeeds, a snap election will be called immediately, and would likely take place on 7 April according to the Swedish Election Authority. On 11 January 2019, it was reported that the Social Democrats, Greens, Centre and Liberals had reached a deal to support Löfven as prime minister in order to end the deadlock. These cooperating parties have only 167 members of Riksdag, and need support from one more party. It was assumed that the Left party would back a Social Democrat coalition by default, but the agreement text specifically excluded the Left party from participation on matters covered by the agreement, and left the party out of future coalition negotiations. The Left party criticized being expected to back a government which would leave them without a voice, and on 14 January, Left Party leader Jonas Sjöstedt stated that they would not back the agreement as it stood, calling for further negotiations. Consequently, the speaker deferred the third prime ministerial vote scheduled for 16 January to instead take place on 18 January to allow Löfven and Sjöstedt to reach their own compromise. On 16 January, Sjöstedt told reporters his party would abstain from voting against Löfven but threatens to initiate a no-confidence vote against him in the future if he supports policies that threaten worker's rights or if he puts forward proposals that further deregulate the rental market. That same day, the Speaker again formally nominated Löfven as a prime ministerial candidate, scheduling a vote in the Riksdag for 18 January. During the vote, Löfven was elected prime minister with 115 Riksdag members voting for him and 77 members who abstained (total of 192 votes). Due to the low number of
yes votes Löfven received, he has the third weakest government since the end of World War II as at the time of his election. The speaker of the Riksdag, Norlén, declared he would nominate Ulf Kristersson for prime minister had the investiture vote failed. This forced the Centre party and the Left party to choose between Löfven, Kristersson (with Åkesson support), and a snap election. The Left party did not want to risk Kristersson becoming the prime minister, and the Centre and Liberal parties did not want a snap election, which, according to polls, could send the Liberals out of the Riksdag and give M+KD+SD a majority. On 21 January 2019, Löfven unveiled the
members of his cabinet and presented his statement of government () to parliament. As was the case with his first government, the second one consisted of Social Democrats and Greens. They include the following ministers: Prime Minister's Office: •
Stefan Löfven (
S) –
Prime Minister of Sweden •
Hans Dahlgren (S) –
EU Minister Ministry of Justice: •
Morgan Johansson (S) –
Justice Minister •
Mikael Damberg (S) –
Interior Minister Foreign Ministry: •
Margot Wallström (S) –
Foreign Minister •
Peter Eriksson (
MP) –
Minister for Development Cooperation •
Ann Linde (S) –
Minister of Foreign Trade and
Minister for Nordic Cooperation Ministry of Labor: •
Ylva Johansson (S) –
Labour Minister •
Åsa Lindhagen (MP) –
Gender Equality Minister Ministry of Infrastructure (new department): •
Tomas Eneroth (S) –
Infrastructure Minister •
Anders Ygeman (S) –
Energy and
Digitalisation Minister (new position) Ministry of Finance: •
Magdalena Andersson (S) –
Finance Minister •
Per Bolund (MP) –
Housing Minister and
Deputy Minister for Finance •
Ardalan Shekarabi (S) –
Consumer Affairs Minister Ministry of Defense: •
Peter Hultqvist (S) –
Defence Minister Ministry of Culture: •
Amanda Lind (MP) –
Culture Minister Ministry of the Environment: •
Isabella Lövin (MP) –
Deputy Prime Minister and
Environment Minister Ministry of Industry: •
Ibrahim Baylan (S) –
Industry Minister •
Jennie Nilsson (S) –
Rural Affairs Minister Ministry of Health: •
Lena Hallengren (S) –
Minister of Health and Social Affairs •
Annika Strandhäll (S) –
Social Security Minister Ministry of Education: •
Anna Ekström (S) –
Education Minister •
Matilda Ernkrans (S) –
Minister for Higher Education and Research == See also ==