Iceland
Prime Minister resigns after Pirate Party’s electoral success
Sigurdur
Ingi Johannsson steps down after losing seats to populist Pirates
Ben Kentish
30-10-2016
Sigurdur Ingi
Johannsson, the Icelandic Prime Minister, has resigned after his
party lost votes to the Pirate Party in Saturday’s general
election.
Mr Johannsson made
the announcement on national television after his centre-right
Progressive Party saw its vote share and number of parliamentary
seats more than halved.
“This was in
accordance with the constitution, to hand in my resignation and then
be asked to stay in office until a new government has been formed,”
Mr Johannsson told a news conference.
His party's
electoral thumping came at the hands of the Pirate Party, whose
populist, anti-establishment message has gained traction in recent
months.
Polls had suggested
the party was on course to win the election but it eventually
finished second, behind the Independence Party that had formed part
of Mr Johannsson’s coalition government.
The Pirate Party won
10 seats in the 63-seat parliament – up from the three it won at
the 2013 general election – while the Independence Party finished
with 21 seats. The governing Progressive Party won just eight seats,
down from 19 in 2013.
The result means the
ruling centre-right parties fell short of the overall majority needed
to form a government, raising the prospect of a left-wing coalition
including the Pirate Party. However, Independence Party leader Bjarni
Benediktsson is expected to first be given the opportunity to try to
assemble a coalition.
Mr Johannsson had
been Prime Minister since April, when his predescessor, Sigmundur
David Gunnlaugsson, was forced to quit after being implicated in a
tax avoidance scandal revealed by the release of the Panama Papers.
Reports that
Iceland’s political and financial elite had sheltered money in
offshore accounts compounded public anger following the 2008
financial crisis, which led to a huge financial collapse in which
many Icelanders lost money.
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