Liberal Party of Sweden
Political party in Sweden
- Politics of Sweden
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The Liberal Party of Sweden (Swedish: Sveriges Liberala Parti) was a political party in Sweden. It was formed in 1923 by the anti-prohibition minority of the Free-minded National Association as a consequence of the split over the issue on alcohol prohibition.
In 1934 the two parties reunited in the form of the People's Party.[1]
Leaders
- Eliel Löfgren, 1923–1930
- Ernst Lyberg, 1930–1933
- Karl Andreas Andersson, 1933–1934
Election results
Date | Votes | Seats | Position | Size | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | % | ± pp | No. | ± | |||
1924 | 69,627 | 3.94 | New | 4 / 230 | New | Opposition | 5th |
1928 | 70,820 | 3.00 | 0.94 | 4 / 230 | 0 | Opposition | 6th |
1932 | 48,722 | 1.95 | 1.05 | 4 / 230 | 0 | Opposition | 7th |
See also
References
- ^ Nohlen, D & Stöver, P (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p1861 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
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(349 seats)
Government (103 of 349 seats) |
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Cabinet's confidence and supply |
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(21 of 705 seats)
- Social Democrats (5)
- Moderate Party (4)
- Sweden Democrats (3)
- Green Party (3)
- Centre Party (2)
- Christian Democrats (2)
- Left Party (1)
- Liberals (1)
(below 4% parliamentary threshold)
- Nuance Party (0.45%)
- Alternative for Sweden (0.26%)
- Feminist Initiative (0.05%)
- Citizens' Coalition (0.20%)
- Pirate Party (0.14%)
- Humanist Democracy (0.09%)
- Christian Values Party (0.09%)
- Knapptryckarna (0.08%)
- Communist Party of Sweden (0.02%)
- Animals' Party
- Democrats
- Health Care Party
- Independent Rural Party
- Senior Citizen Interest Party
- Vård för pengarna
- Workers' Party
- Örebro Party
- Kiruna Party
- Communist Party
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