during the bus tour of 6–7 March 2006. From left to right: Reinfeldt, Olofsson, Hägglund and Leijonborg. The centre-right Alliance for Sweden aimed to win a
majority of seats in the
2006 Riksdag elections and to form a
coalition government. In order to do this, the member parties decided to issue common
policy statements and to draft a joint election manifesto. Each individual party still had its own manifesto and policies, but these would build up from common proposals in the Alliance's joint proposals. The Alliance had policy working groups for six areas:
economic policy,
education policy,
foreign policy, the
welfare state,
employment and
business policy, and
policing. These were not set according to party size, but with one senior politician (often an MP) and one staff per party, and following the idea that "everybody contributes and everybody gains". An example of this policy cooperation was the
budget proposal that the Alliance parties put forward on 2 October 2005. The core proposal was a tax cut of 49 billion
Swedish kronor, which is 1.9% of
GDP and 3.3% of the total income of the
public sector in 2005. Each individual party also proposed its own policies in addition. For example, the Liberals wanted to spend 1bn kronor extra on tertiary education and the Christian Democrats want to have more benefits and tax deductions for families. On 14 June 2006, Alliance for Sweden agreed on a common energy policy which would apply over the next parliamentary term (2006–2010), and included a promise not to shut down any more
nuclear reactors during that period (
Barsebäck 2 was shut down in 2005). The proposal was that no more reactors were to be built, that the nuclear phase-out law would be repealed and that all forms of energy research would be legal and able to receive state grants (research on
nuclear power is currently forbidden in Sweden). An Alliance government would also grant any applications to increase the output of the existing plants, provided that it would be safe to do so. This has been hailed as a historic step, as disagreement over nuclear power has long plagued the centre-right in Sweden: the Centre Party opposes nuclear power, the Moderates and Christian Democrats support its continuing operation while the Liberals want to build more reactors. Some doubts were raised about the long-term survival of this compromise, as neither the Centre Party nor the Liberals have changed their fundamental positions on nuclear power. On 5 July 2006, during the politics week at
Almedalen on
Gotland, the Alliance parties announced a plan to abolish
property tax. Their agreement promised to freeze taxable values at the current level (so that the revaluation that was being carried out would not apply), and to reduce the rate of tax on apartments from 0.5% to 0.4% of their taxable value. A ceiling of 5,000
kronor would also be imposed on the taxation of the value of a house's plot. The parties also agreed on the abolition of the tax and its replacement with a municipal charge independent of the value of the property; this reform was planned to be carried out in 2008. Property tax is estimated to bring in 28.1 billion kronor in 2006, rising to 30.2bn in 2007 and 32.2bn in 2008 (as taxable values rise). The first stage of the Alliance's plan (freezing property values, capping the tax on land value and reducing the rate for apartments) is estimated to cost around 4-5 billion kronor. The financing of this was to be revealed in the Alliance's
manifesto in August 2006. Alliance for Sweden released its election manifesto, entitled
More people in work - more to share (), on 23 August 2006. The result of the election was clear enough on election night for
Moderate Party leader
Fredrik Reinfeldt to declare himself the victor and for
Göran Persson to announce his resignation as
Prime Minister and as leader of the
Social Democratic Party. The four
centre-right parties of Alliance for Sweden formed a government with Fredrik Reinfeldt as Prime Minister, which was presented to the
Riksdag on 6 October. == In government (2006–2014) ==