SWEDISH PRESIDENCY OF THE EU
Brussels fears Swedish far right aims to thwart
EU law-making program
Sweden is due to take over the rotating presidency of
the Council of the EU on January 1.
Politico Dec22_02
BY CHARLIE
DUXBURY AND JACOPO BARIGAZZI
DECEMBER
29, 2022 4:05 AM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/brussels-eu-fears-spoiler-role-sweden-far-right/
STOCKHOLM —
A far-right shadow is looming over Sweden's imminent EU presidency.
Sweden has
long been seen as a cooperative and constructive member of the EU with a
succession of mainstream governments able to corral domestic parliamentary
support for many of Brussels’ big ideas.
But a
general election in September left the new center-right Prime Minister Ulf
Kristersson dependent on the far-right, Euroskeptic Sweden Democrats (SD) for
his parliamentary mandate. That's raised a question mark over whether Stockholm
can maintain momentum on the key files piling up in the EU’s in-tray.
Diplomats
in Brussels — who were looking forward to the Swedish presidency as one that
would be able to get things done — are now worried that the Sweden Democrats'
anti-EU tone will infect the way they operate.
“It’s news
to no one that the Sweden Democrats are the parliament’s most EU critical
party,” SD leader Jimmie Åkesson said during a parliamentary debate on EU
affairs earlier this month. “We believe in cooperation … but we must move away
from the almost manic idea that [Brussels] should meddle more and more in the
politics of member states.”
The EU’s
institutional architecture gives the country with the rotating six-month
presidency of the Council of the EU — currently the Czech Republic — a central
role in setting and progressing the bloc’s policy agenda. To that end, it is
seen as helpful if the presidency country has a clear attitude to EU
cooperation and a widely understood position on central issues on the agenda.
But the
rise of SD, a party with neo-Nazi roots, has scrambled the picture of
Swedish-EU relations for outsiders looking in. This is the first time SD has
held real influence, and officials in Brussels are still figuring out what
policy stances like its ultra-hard line on immigration and relatively friendly
attitude to Viktor Orbán’s Hungary could mean for the way Sweden deals with the
EU.
Swedish
diplomats in Brussels have assured their colleagues that their presidency will
be run from Brussels and not from Stockholm. That has reassured some in the
Council, but the potential influence of SD has prompted unease among others in
Brussels.
Iratxe
García Pérez, the leader of the Socialists and Democrats group in the European
Parliament tweeted following a recent trip to Stockholm: ”I expressed my
concern about the negative influence that extreme-right Sweden Democrats will
have not only on the Swedish government, but also the Swedish EU presidency
starting in January.”
While
Kristersson’s Moderate Party and its two smaller center-right coalition allies
are staunchly pro-EU, SD pushed for a referendum on Sweden’s EU membership in
the months after Brexit.
At the
parliamentary debate in Stockholm this month, the dissonance in messaging
between Kristersson and SD leader Åkesson was on full display.
“In my
government, we see all the possibilities of a stronger EU,” Kristersson said as
he opened the session.
The EU is
“peace,” “reconciliation,” “trade” and “the meeting of people,” he said. It is
“freedom to move” and “mobile phones without roaming charges.”
Åkesson
struck a harsher tone. He branded interactions with the EU by Swedish
governments as “naive” and a form of “self-harming behavior.”
“Every
nation and every people in Europe has the right to be masters in their own
home,” he said.
SD now
occupies an ambiguous place in Sweden’s politics. After a strong showing in
September's election, SD is the largest party in the four-party unit running
the Nordic state of 10.5 million, but it sits outside the government.
The deal it
has struck with Kristersson ensures it has a say over some key domestic policy
areas, from migration to economic growth, but it can also be expected to flex
its muscles when those issues come up at EU level.
“Obviously,
in the same way as they do in domestic politics, they would like to have
influence over core EU policies too,” said Ann-Cathrine Jungar, a political
scientist at Södertörns University in Stockholm.
Migration pact in focus
Migration
in particular has the potential to be a flash point. It is central to SD’s
policy agenda and is set to be a high priority during the Swedish EU
presidency. The latest phase of an ambitious reworking of Brussels’ migration
and asylum policies — its Migration and Asylum Pact — is set for discussion,
with member countries far apart on the issue.
Expectations
had been high before the Swedish election that significant progress could be
made on the pact during the Swedish presidency and that it could perhaps be
completed during the subsequent Spanish or Belgian presidencies.
Sweden
received among the highest rates per capita of asylum seekers during Europe’s
2015 migration crisis, and European diplomats believed that this had given the
country outsize know-how on related issues. In addition, the European
commissioner for home affairs, in charge of migration policy, is currently
Swedish lawmaker Ylva Johansson.
But since
Johansson’s Social Democrats were voted out of power in September, those hopes
of progress have been fading in Brussels. SD has long pushed a line that Sweden
must cut the number of people it grants asylum to to “as close to zero as
possible,” and Sweden’s new government is committed to restricting migration.
Any EU move
to share responsibilities for housing migrants between frontier states and
states like Sweden — away from the bloc’s outer edge — are likely to be
resisted by Åkesson and his party.
Such
intransigence has rattled diplomats who see the migration pact as among the
bloc’s most complex files. “If it was complicated before, it seems impossible
now,” said one diplomat from Central Europe who follows the file closely.
But Tomas
Tobé, a Swedish MEP from Prime Minister Kristersson’s Moderate Party, who
served as European Parliament negotiator for the asylum and migration
management regulation, said that he believed the EU migration file could be
moved forward during the Swedish presidency and that it could still be
completed before the end of the current European term.
“The new
Swedish government knows that there are expectations on them,” he said.
Johansson
is also positive about the chances of success: “You can have high expectation
on the Swedish government,” she told POLITICO.
Rule of law
The outlook
for the EU’s efforts to strengthen the rule of law within member countries —
especially in Hungary and Poland — has also been clouded by the rise of SD,
according to some observers.
The
Commission concluded in November that Hungary had failed to meet a pledge to
adopt 17 rule-of-law reforms in order to access €7.5 billion in EU funds, and
in September the European Parliament voted to describe Hungary as no longer a
democracy.
But SD MEP
Charlie Weimers voted against the motion, a move fellow Swedish MEPs
interpreted as a sign of approval for Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán,
whom NGOs accuse of curbing media freedom and allowing corruption to flourish.
“Today we
were again reminded that the Sweden Democrats do not stand up for the
principles of the rule of law in the EU,” Swedish Liberal Party MEP Karin
Karlsbro said after the vote. “The rest of the European Parliament is clear —
Hungary can no longer be counted as a free democracy, but SD has Orbán's back
as usual.”
Experts say
it remains unclear how SD will engage on migration or rule of law, or any of
the rest of the 350 files on the agenda for the Swedes' six month-long
presidency.
Swedish
Europe Minister Jessika Roswall said SD lawmakers in the Swedish parliament’s
EU affairs select committee have committed to being “constructive” and what she
had seen so far from the party had borne that out.
Roswall,
who previously chaired that EU select committee, said that her background there
negotiating with all the parties in parliament gave her confidence that
different views could be considered and broad support for Sweden’s EU policies
secured among the lawmakers.
"Even
if sometimes we don’t think alike, we have the ambition to be an important
country in the EU,” she said.
But much of
SD’s appeal over recent years has come from its willingness to oppose the
mainstream with one of its key slogans being “give ‘em hell.”
In 2014 and
again in 2021, SD pushed the Swedish government to the brink of collapse, and
on the campaign trail this year, Åkesson lashed out at opponents on both the
left and the right.
In the
parliamentary debate in mid-November, Åkesson acknowledged that Sweden, as a
small export-dependent country, needed to cooperate with its neighbors. But
that does not mean allowing more power to accumulate in Brussels, he said.
“It is not
the same thing as wanting more power to go to other countries’ bureaucrats who
we can’t choose and we can’t vote out,” he said.
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