Swedish People's Party of Finland explained

Native Name:
Native Name Lang:sv
Chairperson:Anders Adlercreutz
General Secretary:Hanna Seppä
Foundation:1906
Position:Centre to centre-right
Headquarters:Simonkatu 8A,
00100 Helsinki, Finland
International:Liberal International
Country:Finland
Abbreviation:Swedish: SFP
Finnish: RKP, R
Membership Year:2016
Membership: 30,000[1]
Newspaper:
Student Wing:[2]
Youth Wing:Svensk Ungdom
Womens Wing:Svenska Kvinnoförbundet
European:Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe
Europarl:Renew Europe
Affiliation1 Title:Nordic affiliation
Affiliation1:Centre Group
Seats1 Title:Eduskunta
Seats2 Title:European Parliament
Seats3 Title:Municipalities
Seats4:
Seats4 Title:County seats
Leader1 Title:Parliamentary group leader
Leader2 Name:

Sandra Bergqvist
Leader2 Title:Deputy chairs
Leader3 Name:Eva Biaudet
Leader3 Title:Chair of the party council

The Swedish People's Party of Finland (SPP; Swedish: Svenska folkpartiet i Finland, SFP; Finnish: Suomen ruotsalainen kansanpuolue, RKP) is a Finnish political party founded in 1906. Its primary aim is to represent the interests of the minority Swedish-speaking population of Finland.[3] [4] [5] The party is currently a participant in the Government of Petteri Orpo, holding the posts of Minister of Education, Minister for European Affairs, and Minister of Youth, Sport and Physical Activity.

An ethnic catch-all party,[6] its main election issue since its inception has been the Swedish-speaking Finns' right to their own language while maintaining the official position of the Swedish language in Finland.[7] Ideologically, it is liberal,[8] [9] [10] social-liberal,[11] centrist,[12] [13] and pro-European.[14] The party has been in a governmental position from 1979 to 2015 and again since 2019, with one or two seats in government, and has collaborated with both centre-right and centre-left parties in parliament.

The fact that both the Finnish centre-right and centre-left have needed the support from the party has meant that they have been able to affect politics of Finland on a larger scale than the party's actual size would suggest. The position of the Swedish language as one of two official languages in Finland and the Swedish-speaking minority's right to Swedish culture are two of the results of the party's influence in Finnish politics. The party is a member of the Liberal International, the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe, and Renew Europe. The youth organisation of the party is called Svensk Ungdom (Swedish Youth).

History and electorate

The Swedish Party (1870–1906), a parliamentary elite party based on members in the Diet of Finland, is the historical predecessor of the Swedish People's Party of Finland. It was a part of the Svecoman movement and its main policy was opposition of the Fennoman movement.

Unlike Fennomans, who were largely liberal on other matters than the language question, the Svecoman were conservative. Axel Lille and Axel Olof Freudenthal are often considered as some of the main "founding fathers" of the movement. Most members of the Liberal Party joined the Swedish Party in the 1880s, after the Liberals ceased to exist as a distinct party. The Swedish People's Party of Finland was founded in the 1906 party congress of the Swedish Party, making it one of the oldest parties in Finland. The first leader of Swedish People's Party was Axel Lille.

The current leader of the party is Anders Adlercreutz.[15] In the Parliament of Finland the representative for Åland is usually included in SPP's parliamentary group, regardless of his/her party affiliation; parties on Åland are separate from those on the mainland, but their common interest in Swedish-language issues gives them much in common with the Swedish People's Party group as regards national politics.

The party receives its main electoral support from the Swedish speaking minority, which makes up about 5.5% of Finland's population.[16] During its history, the party has suffered slow but steady decline in adherence, following the decline of the percentage of Swedish-speaking population. In 1907, the party received 12% of national votes; after World War II, it received 7% of the vote; and in the 2011 parliamentary election, it received 4.3% of the votes (and nine MPs). In municipal elections, it holds large majorities in municipalities with a Swedish-speaking majority.

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. Since 1956, the year when Urho Kekkonen was elected President, the party has been nearly continuously in the government. It has been part of all coalitions with the significant exception of Paasio's first cabinet (1966–68), which included only socialists (Social Democratic Party (SDP), the split SDP faction Social Democratic Union of Workers and Smallholders and Finnish People's Democratic League) and the Centre Party.

Short periods of rule by single-party minority governments, Miettunen cabinet (1961–62, Centre) and Paasio's second government (1972, SDP) and of nonpartisan caretaker governments have also interrupted its stay in the government. For this reason, the SPP is often criticized for being a single-issue party that allegedly accepts nearly all other policies as long as its own vital interest, the status of the Swedish language is maintained.

However, although Vanhanen's first cabinet made Swedish a voluntary subject in the upper secondary schools' matriculation exam, the SPP remained in the government. In contrast, the Greens left the previous government after a new nuclear power plant was decided in 2002.

The SPP's long continuous participation in the Finnish cabinets came to an end in following the 2015 parliamentary election when it was left out of the Sipilä Cabinet.[17] In June 2019, the SPP returned to government with two ministerial positions in the Rinne Cabinet, the Minister of Justice and the Minister for Nordic Cooperation and Equality.[18]

Recently, the SPP has emphasized the liberal part of its programme, attempting to woo voters outside its traditional Swedish-speaking electorate. In 2010, the party added the word Suomen ("of Finland") to its official Finnish name.

Election results

Parliament of Finland

ImageSize = width:1100 height:240PlotArea = width:1000 height:160 left:60 bottom:50AlignBars = justify

DateFormat = x.yPeriod = from:0 till:15TimeAxis = orientation:verticalAlignBars = justifyScaleMajor = unit:year increment:5 start:0Colors= id:SB value:rgb(0.055,0.533,0.827) PlotData= bar:% color:SB width:20 mark:(line,white) align:left fontsize:S bar:1907 from:start till:12.60 text:12,6 bar:1908 from:start till:12.74 text:12,7 bar:1909 from:start till:12.31 text:12,3 bar:1910 from:start till:13.53 text:13,5 bar:1911 from:start till:13.31 text:13,3 bar:1913 from:start till:13.07 text:13,1 bar:1916 from:start till:11.76 text:11,8 bar:1917 from:start till:10.90 text:10,9 bar:1919 from:start till:12.13 text:12,1 bar:1922 from:start till:12.41 text:12,4 bar:1924 from:start till:12.03 text:12,0 bar:1927 from:start till:12.20 text:12,2 bar:1929 from:start till:11.45 text:11,5 bar:1930 from:start till:10.03 text:10,0 bar:1933 from:start till:10.42 text:10,4 bar:1936 from:start till:10.36 text:10,4 bar:1939 from:start till:9.61 text:9,6 bar:1945 from:start till:7.90 text:7,9 bar:1948 from:start till:7.34 text:7,3 bar:1951 from:start till:7.20 text:7,2 bar:1954 from:start till:6.76 text:6,8 bar:1958 from:start till:6.50 text:6,5 bar:1962 from:start till:6.11 text:6,1 bar:1966 from:start till:5.69 text:5,7 bar:1970 from:start till:5.34 text:5,3 bar:1972 from:start till:5.06 text:5,1 bar:1975 from:start till:4.66 text:4,7 bar:1979 from:start till:4.23 text:4,2 bar:1983 from:start till:4.61 text:4,6 bar:1987 from:start till:5.30 text:5,3 bar:1991 from:start till:5.48 text:5,5 bar:1995 from:start till:5.14 text:5,1 bar:1999 from:start till:5.12 text:5,1 bar:2003 from:start till:4.61 text:4,6 bar:2007 from:start till:4.57 text:4,6 bar:2011 from:start till:4.28 text:4,3 bar:2015 from:start till:4.87 text:4,9 bar:2019 from:start till:4.53 text:4,5 bar:2023 from:start till:4.31 text:4,3

ElectionVotes%Seats+/-Government
1907112,267 12.60
1908103,14612.74
1909104,19112.31 1
1910107,121 13.53 1
1911106,81013.31
191394,672 13.07 1
191693,55511.76 4
1917108,19010.90
1919116,58212.13 1
1922107,41412.41 3
1924105,733 12.03 2
1927111,00512.20 1
1929108,88611.45 1
1930113,31810.03 3
1933115,433 10.42 1
1936131,440 11.20
1939124,7209.61 3
1945134,1067.90 4
137,981 7.34 1
1951130,5247.20 1
1954135,7686.76 2
1958126,365 6.50 1
1962140,6896.11
1966134,832 5.69 2
1970135,4655.34
1972130,407 5.06 2
1975128,2114.66
1979122,4184.23
1983137,423 4.61 1
1987152,5975.30 2
1991149,4765.48 1
1995142,8745.14
1999137,3305.12
2003128,8244.61 3
2007126,5204.57 1
2011125,7854.28
2015144,8024.88
2019139,6404.53
2023133,3184.31

European Parliament

Election Votes%Seats+/-
1996129,4255.75 (#6)
199984,1536.77 (#6)
200494,4215.70 (#6)
2009101,4536.09 (#6)
2014116,7476.76 (#7)
2019116,0336.34 (#7)
2024112,2456.14 (#7)

Presidential elections

ElectionCandidate1st round2nd roundResult
Votes%Votes%
1994Elisabeth Rehn702,21122.0 (#2)1,476,29446.1 (#2)
2000241,8777.9 (#4)
2006Henrik Lax48,7031.6 (#7)
2012Eva Biaudet82,5982.7 (#7)
2018[19] Nils Torvalds44,7761.5 (#8)
2024[20] Did not contest

Political positions

The Swedish language is one of the two official languages of Finland. The SPP has as its main purpose the protection and strengthening of the position of the Swedish language in Finland.

The Swedish People's Party of Finland has the most eclectic profile of any of the political parties in Finland. Its members and supporters chiefly include:

Although the SPP represents a small minority of Finland, having Swedish as a mother tongue is not much of a political handicap in and of itself. Several times, Swedish speaking presidential candidates have gathered considerable support, although not necessarily as candidates for the Swedish People's Party of Finland:

The SPP supported Finland's accession bid to NATO.[21]

List of party leaders

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.sfp.fi/sv/content/verksamhet SFP website
  2. Web site: Markus Blomquist ny ordförande för SFP i Åbo . Åbo Underrättelser . 30 November 2018 . 14 February 2019 . sv .
  3. Book: Arter, David. Scandinavian Politics Today . registration. 1999 . Manchester University Press . 978-0-7190-5133-3 . 62.
  4. Book: Bondeson, Ulla. Nordic Moral Climates: Value Continuities and Discontinuities in Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden . 2003 . Transaction Publishers . 978-0-7658-0203-3 . 20.
  5. Book: Hans van den Brandhof . The Republic of Finland. Lucas Prakke. Constantijn Kortmann . Constitutional Law of 15 EU Member States. 2004 . Kluwer . 978-90-13-01255-2 . 183.
  6. Book: K. Beyme. Transition to Democracy in Eastern Europe. 1996. Springer. 978-0-230-37433-1. 59.
  7. Web site: Finland. Nordsieck. Wolfram. 2019. Parties and Elections in Europe. 15 April 2019.
  8. Book: Bergqvist, Christina. Equal Democracies?: Gender and Politics in the Nordic Countries . 1999 . Nordic Council of Ministers . 978-82-00-12799-4 . 319.
  9. Juvonen. Tuula. 2016-05-01. Out and Elected: Political Careers of Openly Gay and Lesbian Politicians in Germany and Finland. Redescriptions: Political Thought, Conceptual History and Feminist Theory. 19. 1. 49. 10.7227/R.19.1.4. 2308-0914. free.
  10. Book: Bale, Tim . Riding the populist wave: Europe's mainstream right in crisis . 2021 . Cambridge University Press . . 978-1-009-00686-6 . Cambridge, United Kingdom . 34 . 1256593260.
  11. Book: Vít Hloušek. Lubomír Kopeček. Origin, Ideology and Transformation of Political Parties: East-Central and Western Europe Compared. 2010. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.. 978-0-7546-7840-3. 204.
  12. Book: Jan-Erik . Lane . Svante . Ersson . The Nordic Countries: Compromise and Corporatism in the Welfare State. Political Institutions in Europe. Josep Colomer. Jan-Erik Lane. Josep M. Colomer. 2008 . Routledge . 978-1-134-07354-2 . 260.
  13. Web site: 2015-03-06. Finland MPs vote to keep Swedish in schools. 2021-12-21. The Local Sweden. en-US.
  14. Web site: SFP:s Riksdag ValsProgram 2019. RKP. SFP. 2019. SFP. 18 April 2019.
  15. Web site: Swedish People's Party elects Adlercreutz as new chair after Wickström drops out of race . yle.fi . yle . 16 June 2024 . 16 June 2024 .
  16. Web site: Finland in Figures . Tilastokeskus - Population . Stat.fi . 23 December 2013.
  17. News: Perusporvarihallitus on Juha Sipilän valinta. 8 May 2015. 8 May 2015.
  18. Web site: Government of Prime Minister Rinne appointed.
  19. Web site: Presidential election 2018 / Results / Whole country . 2018-04-04 . Ministry of Justice . 2018-06-11.
  20. Web site: SFP ställer inte upp kandidat i presidentvalet – men stöder inte heller Stubb. 2023-09-07 . sv . 2023-09-07.
  21. News: RKP on nyt virallisesti Nato-puolue . 12 June 2016 . 12 June 2016 . Yle.