Swedish People's Party (Finland)
Encyclopedia : S : SW : SWE : Swedish People's Party (Finland)
| Swedish Peoples' Party | |
|---|---|
| |
| Name in Finnish | Ruotsalainen kansanpuolue |
| Name in Swedish | Svenska folkpartiet |
| Leader | Stefan Wallin |
| Founded | 1906 |
| Headquarters | Simonsgatan 8 A FI-00101 HELSINGFORS |
| Political Ideology | Liberalism |
| European Affiliation | European Liberal Democrat and Reform Party |
| International Affiliation | Liberal International |
| Colours | Yellow |
| Website | [http://www.sfp.fi] |
| See also | Finnish Politics Finnish Parliament Finnish Government Finnish President Political parties Elections |
History, Leaders and Electorate
The Swedish People's Party was founded by Axel Lille in 1906, making it one of the oldest parties in Finland. The current leader of the party is Stefan Wallin. In the Parliament of Finland the representative for Åland is usually included in SFP's parliamentary group, regardless of his/her party affiliation. (The political parties in Åland have no counterparts in Mainland Finland, but SFP's interests are very similar to those of Åland.)The party receives its main electoral support from the Swedish speaking minority, which makes up about 5.1%[link] of Finland's and Åland's population. During its history, the party has suffered slow but steady decline in adherence, following the decline of the Finland-Swedish population: in 1907 it got 12% of national votes, after World War II 7% and in the 2003 parliamentary election 4.5%. Despite its position as one of the minor political parties in the Finnish parliament it has frequently been one of the partners forming the governing coalition cabinets.
Political Positions
The Swedish language enjoys a privileged position as one of the two official languages of Finland. The SFP has as its main raison d'être the protection and strengthening of the position of Swedish of Finland.The Swedish People's Party has the most eclectic profile of any of the political parties in Finland, its members and supporters including (chiefly):
- fishermen and farmers from the Swedish-speaking coastal areas,
- small-town dwellers from the adjacent Swedish-speaking towns,
- green-minded and left-leaning middle-class intellectuals and cultural elite, and
- rightist-inclined economic liberals from Helsinki.
- In 1956 the Finland-Swedish Social Democrat Fagerholm got one elector's vote less than needed to be elected, and the Agrarian Urho Kekkonen was elected.
- In 1994 the SFP-candidate Elisabeth Rehn lost to the Social Democrat candidate Martti Ahtisaari, also by a narrow margin (53.9% to 46.1%).
See also
- Liberalism
- Contributions to liberal theory
- Liberalism worldwide
- List of liberal parties
- Liberal democracy
- Liberalism and centrism in Finland
- Finland's language strife
- Swedish Assembly of Finland
- Pakkoruotsi
- Svecoman
- Axel Olof Freudenthal
- Racism
Important politicians
External links
- [Swedish People's Party (Finland)] official site
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