With Sweden’s far-right winning seats in Parliament for the first time, denying the outgoing centre-right alliance an overall majority, and the historically dominant Social Democrats clobbered, Swedish media yesterday saw the end of an era in their country’s politics.

“The (centre-right) Alliance’s victory marks the end of the Social Democrats’ long dominance of Swedish politics. The election’s unpleasant back side is the (far-right) Sweden Democrats’ advance,” leading daily Dagens Nyheter said in an editorial entitled The end of an era.

The Svenska Dagbladet newspaper meanwhile said it was time for Swedes to “draw up a new national image” yesterday morning as it hammered out the three central changes to Sweden’s political landscape, “a centre-right government without a majority, a crashed social democracy and a kingmaker party with roots in the far-right”.

The paper also noted that in the absence of a majority in Parliament – the exiting coalition obtained 172 seats in the 349 seat Parliament – “Fredrik Reinfeldt ... now has to invite in the Green Party to talks in order to build a government that is able to act”.

It predicted a “shaky ride ahead for the election’s winner”.

Swedish media seemed just as concerned with the complicated parliament ahead as with the historical defeat of the Social Democrats, which have dominated politics here for most of the century. Recalling that the Social Democrats had been in power “for 83 per cent of the time since 1932”, DN said “the time when one party was subscribed to power and could decide of everything is gladly over”.

With Mona Sahlin as their leader, this election marked the Social Democrats’ worse score since 1914 and “the party will never again feel like it owns Sweden”, Goeterborgs-Posten said.

“In other countries, its obviously not strange for a centre-right government to be re-elected, but this is Sweden, it’s a never before seen phenomenon,” said SvD. The paper noted that with no party sharing the Sweden Democrats’ anti-immigrant views, Sweden has also been an exception.

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