After a week in which he had to decide either to resign or declare a
snap election,[7] Löfven chose to resign on 28 June, meaning that the
Speaker of the RiksdagAndreas Norlén was tasked to find a Prime Minister the Riksdag could tolerate.[8] In the meantime, Löfven remained as Prime Minister but only as part of a
caretaker government.[9] On 7 July, Löfven was re-elected by the Riksdag, as 173 MPs voted against him out of the 175 necessary for a candidate to fail such a vote. The
Löfven III Cabinet was officially formed and installed on 9 July.[10]
After the
2018 Swedish general election, the
Social Democratic Party together with the
Green Party joined together with
Centre Party and
Liberal Party to form the
January Agreement (Swedish: Januariavtalet).[11] This agreement gained passive support from the
Left Party who were excluded from the agreement. The agreement stated that the Social Democratic Party and Green Party would form the government with the support from the Centre Party and Liberal Party who would have some of their political programme adopted by the government. The January Agreement consists of 73 points ranging from immigration policy to housing policy. The Left Party were heavily against two points in the agreement, a proposal to reform the
Employment Protection Act,[12] and another point which would introduce market rents (i.e. the end of
rent control) for newly-built residential developments,[13] the latter of which was the main cause to the uprising of the government crisis. Both of these points were conditions of the Centre and Liberal Parties during the negotiations,[14][15][16] rather than Social Democratic or Green Party policy. As early as 2018, the then party leader of the Left Party,
Jonas Sjöstedt said that they would not hesitate to declare a no-confidence vote against the government if they were to introduce a bill on market rents,[17] and this threat was repeated when voting to make Löfven Prime Minister.[18]
On 8 June 2021, the report of the government's commission on removing rent controls on new-build apartments was concluded and delivered to the government.[16] On 15 June, the Left Party leader
Nooshi Dadgostar called a press conference and gave the government a 48-hour ultimatum to scrap the proposed law.[19] On 17 June, the government had not said a word and Dadgostar announced that they no longer had confidence in the government.[20]Jimmie Åkesson, the party leader of the
Sweden Democrats, gave his support to Dadgostar, and shortly thereafter a vote was called by the Sweden Democrats to the
Speaker of the Riksdag.[21][22] Both leaders of opposition parties the
Moderate Party and the
Christian Democrats announced that they also had no confidence in the sitting government.[23] This meant that there was a majority in the
Riksdag that had no confidence in Löfven, and a successful no-confidence vote was imminent.[24][25][26]
Vote
The no-confidence vote took place on 21 June, and Löfven was ousted by a majority of the Riksdag.[2][4] Because of the
COVID-19 pandemic in Sweden only 55
members of the Riksdag were allowed to partake in a vote in the chamber. According to the
Basic Laws of Sweden, there had to be at least 175 yes-votes from the members of the parliament for a Prime Minister to be ousted. Because of this, the "55-rule" was not applied for this vote and all 349 members of the Riksdag had to be present for the vote, unless
symptoms of
Covid-19 were present at the time. The decision to have all 349 members present was criticized by Swedish media personalities who meant this vote could become a
superspreading event of Covid-19.[27] Some members of parliament were hesitant to the decision and called it "unpleasant" and "uncomfortable" that there was a slight risk of sick people not staying home during the vote.[28] Prior to the vote, the Speaker of the Riksdag called in the
Parliamentary leaders of every party to discuss how the vote would take place. Johan Carlson,
director general of the
Public Health Agency of Sweden, said that the strategy that was put forward were well-thought-out and reasonable for the occasion.[29]
The Riksdag previously had a recommendation in place on wearing
face masks in the building; however, this recommendation was abolished on 14 June and put into effect on 18 June.[29] For the vote on 21 June, the recommendation was put into place once again temporarily.[30]
The vote took place on 21 June at 10:00 AM (
CEST),[31] and a majority of the members of parliament voted yes to oust Löfven. This was the first time that a Prime Minister lost a vote of confidence in the Riksdag.[32] This gave Löfven a week to resign or declare a
snap election.[7]
Annie Lööf, leader of the
Centre Party, announced on 23 June 2021 that the party was abandoning point 44, rent control reforms, which would introduce market rents on newly built apartments.[34] The
Liberals, who previously stated they were going to support a new liberal government, declined any further talks with the Centre Party revolving the January agreement. As it stood from 23 June, Prime Minister Stefan Löfven's only hope to stay as the Prime Minister lay in the hands of the two independent politicians in the Riksdag: Emma Carlsson Löfdahl (formerly a member of the
Liberals)[clarification needed] and
Amineh Kakabaveh (formerly a member of the
Left Party). Both had to vote for Löfven as Prime Minister in the next Riksdag vote in order for him to retain the premiership.[35][36]
During a press conference on 28 June, Löfven announced that he would resign, meaning that the Speaker of the Riksdag
Andreas Norlén would start the process of finding a Prime Minister whom the Riksdag could approve.[8] In the meantime Löfven remains PM but only as part of a caretaker government.[9]
Government formation talks and re-election of Löfven
Speaker Andreas Norlén started government formation talks with the party leaders on 29 June. In the afternoon, Moderate party leader
Ulf Kristersson was formally tasked with forming a government and given three days.[37] On 1 July, Kristersson informed the Speaker that there was not enough support in parliament for his proposed government constellation, one consisting of his own Moderate Party, the Christian Democrats, the Sweden Democrats and the Liberals.[38] The same day, the Speaker gave Stefan Löfven until 5 July to find an acceptable government coalition.[39] The Speaker can propose a prime ministerial candidate four times before a snap election is automatically called.[37]
On 7 July, Stefan Löfven was re-elected by the Riksdag, 173 MPs voted against him out of the 175 necessary for a candidate to fail such a vote.
Löfven's third government was officially formed on 9 July.[10]
^Regeringskansliet, Regeringen och (4 June 2021).
"Fri hyressättning vid nyproduktion". Regeringskansliet (in Swedish).
Archived from the original on 22 June 2021. Retrieved 21 June 2021.