vriggy
vriggy t1_iskdupn wrote
Reply to comment by MrMitchWeaver in [OC] The representation of the Swedish parties in the Swedish parliament over time since 1911. by MaxEin
From top to bottom
Ö - Misc.
NYD - New democracy (basically far right populstic ideology)
SD - Swedish democrats (far right ideology with its roots in ultra nationalistic ideology, ie nazis)
KD - Christian democrats (used to be closer to center, inching further to the right the past few years)
M - Moderates (right leaning capitalstic ideology, used to be very liberal - also inching further towards the right in the last 4 yrs or so)
LIB or L - Liberals (right of center ideology, mixed bag of proposals)
L - Not sure if these are Liberals or LIB was.
FI - Feminstic initative (far left, super "woke" - aka "everything is the fault of men")
MP - Green party (environmental issues, left leaning party)
JRF - Not sure what this is
C - The center party (slight left of center, used to be more center, past few years has been inching closer towards the left)
S - Social democrats (the party that has basically been running the country for the majority of the last 100 yrs, far left leaning however trying to distance themselves from FI/V as much as possible lately, used be to called "The workers' party")
V - Left party (far left, ultra "woke" - basically same as FI in today's climate, used to be "OG woke" but turned even further left once real "equality of opportunity" became a mainstream idea)
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SSV/SKP/SP are all communist parties that barely/do not exist anymore. I think LIB might be an old party as well, L should be the "Liberals".
vriggy t1_ismwrt4 wrote
Reply to comment by MrMitchWeaver in [OC] The representation of the Swedish parties in the Swedish parliament over time since 1911. by MaxEin
Sweden might be a socialist country but it is actually very conservative (especially if you compare to Denmark and Norway). When it comes to social issues Sweden is less convervative than its neighbours.