Swedish general election, 1985

Swedish general election, 1985

1982 ←
15 September 1985
→ 1988

All 349 seats to the Riksdag
175 seats were needed for a majority
  First party Second party
 
Leader Olof Palme Ulf Adelsohn
Party Social Democrats Moderate Party
Last election 166 seats 86 seats
Seats won 159 seats 76
Seat change -7 -10
Popular vote 2,487,551 1,187,335
Percentage 44.68% 21.33%

PM before election

Olof Palme
Social Democrats

Elected PM

Olof Palme
Social Democrats

Kingdom of Sweden

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
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Elections to the Swedish Riksdag held 15 September 1985.

Election campaign

At a campaign meeting in Sundsvall on 22 August, Minister of social welfare Sten Andersson promised to increase the state pensions as a compensation for the price increases following the devaluation of the krona in 1982. The social democratic government also stressed that it had managed to decrease the budget deficit from 90 billion to 60 billion kronas. The Social Democrats (Socialdemokraterna) also promised not to increase taxes or lower the quality of the welfare system.

The Centre Party (Centerpartiet) had a technical cooperation with the Christian Democrats (Kristdemokraterna). The Christian Democrats always received fewer votes than the 4 %-threshold for gaining seats to the Riksdag. The cooperation was criticized within the Centre Party. The aim was for both parties to gain votes but in the end, the Centre Party decreased its share of the votes compared to the previous election. The Christian Democrats only gained one seat in parliament for its leader, Alf Svensson.

The political debate was dominated by the Moderate Party (Moderaterna) and the social democrats. In January 1985, the Moderate Party had proposed in parliament a detailed plan with tax cuts and cuts in spending. The Social Democrats' leader Olof Palme managed to turn this against the Moderate Party by repeating the negative effects this would have on junior soccer teams. In an opinion poll by SIFO in June 1985 the Moderate Party was supported by 30 percent but their support decreased during the campaign.

The Liberal People's Party (Folkpartiet) had chosen Bengt Westerberg as its party leader in October 1983 but he had had trouble getting his message through, not least because of the party's small size in parliament and only receiving a 5.9 percent support in the 1982 election. But in August Westerberg got a public breakthrough as a calm and honest politician compared to the constantly arguing Adelsohn and Palme. In the end, the Liberal People's Party was the big winner of the 1985 election by increasing its support to 14.2 percent.

Results

Party Leader Votes Seats
# +− % # +−
  Social Democrats Olof Palme 2,487,551 44.68 −0.93 159 −7
  Moderate Party Ulf Adelsohn 1,187,335 21.33 −2.31 76 −10
  People's Party Bengt Westerberg 792,268 14.23 +8.33 51 +30
  Centre Party1 Thorbjörn Fälldin 691,258 12.42 −3.06 44 −12
  Left Party - Communists Lars Werner 298,419 5.36 −0.20 19 −1
  Green Party Ragnhild Pohanka and Per Gahrton 83,645 1.50 −0.15
  Others2 26,546 0.48
No. of valid votes 5,567,022 100.00   349  
Invalid votes 48,220  
Total 5,615,242
(89.93%)

Interpretive maps