After the
2018 Swedish general election, the
Social Democratic Party together with the
Green Party joined with
Centre Party and
Liberal Party to form the
January Agreement (Swedish:
Januariavtalet). This agreement gained passive support from the
Left Party who were excluded from the agreement. The agreement stated that the Social Democratic Party and Green Party would form the government with the support from the Centre Party and Liberal Party who would have some of their political programme adopted by the government. The January Agreement consists of 73 points ranging from immigration policy to housing policy. The Left Party were heavily against two points in the agreement, a proposal to reform the
Employment Protection Act, and another point which would introduce market rents (i.e. the end of
rent control) for newly built residential developments, the latter of which was the main cause to the uprising of the government crisis. Both of these points were conditions of the Centre and Liberal Parties during the negotiations, and this threat was repeated when voting to make Löfven Prime Minister. On 8 June 2021, the report of the government's commission on removing rent controls on new-build apartments was concluded and delivered to the government. On 15 June, the Left Party leader
Nooshi Dadgostar called a press conference and gave the government a 48-hour ultimatum to scrap the proposed law. On 17 June, the government had not said a word and Dadgostar announced that they no longer had confidence in the government.
Jimmie Åkesson, the party leader of the
Sweden Democrats, gave his support to Dadgostar, and shortly thereafter a vote was called by the Sweden Democrats to the
Speaker of the Riksdag. Both leaders of opposition parties the
Moderate Party and the
Christian Democrats announced that they also had no confidence in the sitting government. This meant that there was a majority in the
Riksdag that had no confidence in Löfven, and a successful no-confidence vote was imminent. == Vote ==