– Ensured that the Green Party has had a difficult and turbulent time behind them, it is not particularly unexpected numbers. Now it is important for us to focus forward, working for a sustainable society in the country and push for an aggressive climate policy, says party secretary Amanda Lind.
The Green Party’s opinion-curve has been tilted downwards long, but now is steeper than ever. Before the 2014 election the party had around ten per cent of voter support in Swedish voter opinion, which are the aggregated results from Demoskop, Novus, Sifo and Ipsos.
After the election, the party was around seven percent, but in December the party went below six percent and after Mehmet Kaplan’s resignation and criticism of the party leadership for the management of the party executive candidate yasri khan party received 5.2 percent last month and now also 4 2.
the question now is how crucial it is for the party’s attempts to lift that you have two new ministers, Peter Eriksson and Carolina Forest.
– I think it gives very good and new strength in our work. It is important for us to focus on housing and our environmental and climate policies, says Amanda Lind.
In majmätning are changes in voter support in general small. The Left continues to slow up and get with the 7.7 percent its best result in two years. Liberals get 6.4 percent its biggest support since the election. The largest party is the Social Democrats with 26.5 percent, followed by the Conservatives at 25.5 and the Sweden Democrats on 16.7.
Since January, Alliance , led by about three percentage points above the red-green parties in May with 41.8 percent of voter support to 38.4. The question now is how the Red-Green will try to reverse it.
– It is important I think for the red-green government and the Social Democrats and the Green Party to show that it is good for Sweden. We begin to see the results of our policy: we have more people in work, the build more, we have a clear vision and a clear path for one hundred percent renewable and climate adaptation. This we have to be even better at communicating, says Amanda Lind.
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