Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
politics

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1979 Swedish general election

none


none

FieldValue
countrySweden
typeparliamentary
previous_election1976 Swedish general election
previous_year1976
next_election1982 Swedish general election
next_year1982
seats_for_electionAll 349 seats in the Riksdag
majority_seats175
election_date16 September 1979
image_size130x130px
image1Olof Palme 1974 (cropped).jpg
leader1Olof Palme
party1Swedish Social Democratic Party
last_election1152
seats1154
seat_change12
popular_vote12,356,234
percentage143.24%
swing10.49 pp
image2Gösta Bohman (1967).jpg
leader2Gösta Bohman
party2Moderate Party
last_election255
seats273
seat_change218
popular_vote21,108,406
percentage220.34%
swing24.75 pp
image3Falldin.JPG
leader3Thorbjörn Fälldin
party3Centre Party (Sweden)
last_election386
seats364
seat_change322
popular_vote3984,589
percentage318.07%
swing36.01 pp
image4Ola Ullsten.JPG
leader4Ola Ullsten
party4People's Party
last_election439
seats438
seat_change41
popular_vote4577,063
percentage410.59%
swing40.47 pp
image5Bundesarchiv Bild 183-N0701-023, Berlin, Erich Honecker, Lars Werner cropped.jpg
leader5Lars Werner
party5Left Communists
last_election517
seats520
seat_change53
popular_vote5305,420
percentage55.61%
swing50.86 pp
titlePM
before_electionOla Ullsten
before_partyPeople's Party
after_electionThorbjörn Fälldin
after_partyCentre Party (Sweden)
map_imageRiksdagsvalet 1979.svg
map_captionMap of the election, showing the distribution of constituency and levelling seats, as well as the largest political bloc within each constituency.

General elections were held in Sweden on 16 September 1979. Although the Swedish Social Democratic Party remained the largest party, winning 154 of the 349 seats in the Riksdag, the liberal interim government of Ola Ullsten was succeeded by another centre-right coalition government composed of the People's Party, the Moderate Party and the Centre Party, led by Centre Party leader Thorbjörn Fälldin. The three parties together won 175 seats, compared to the 174 won by the Social Democrats and Communists. It was the only time that non-socialist parties retained power in an election between 1928 and 2010. The Moderates dramatically increased their representation in the Riksdag, becoming the largest party of the non-socialist bloc, a position they maintained until 2022.

Despite the unexpected victory, the coalition split in 1981 when the Moderates withdrew support in protest at Fälldin's tax policies, which they viewed as "too leftist". Despite not being the leader of the coalition party with the most seats, Fälldin had been the designate Prime Minister since his earlier resignation in 1978, upon disagreement over the question of nuclear power.

Debates

1979 Swedish general election debatesDateTimeOrganizersModeratorsPresent Invitee Non-inviteeSMCLVRefsSwedish Social Democratic Party}}"Moderate Party}}"Centre Party (Sweden)}}"Liberals (Sweden)}}"Left Party (Sweden)}}"
Sveriges TelevisionIngemar OdlanderP
Olof PalmeP
Gösta BohmanP
Thorbjörn FälldinP
Ola UllstenP
Lars Werner

Results

Main article: Results of the 1979 Swedish general election

Seat distribution

ConstituencyTotal
seatsSeats wonBy partyBy coalitionSMCFVRightLeftSwedish Social Democratic Party}};"Moderate Party}};"Centre Party (Sweden)}};"Liberals (Sweden)}};"Left Party (Sweden)}};;"Centre Party (Sweden)}};"Swedish Social Democratic Party}};"Älvsborg North9Älvsborg South8Blekinge6Bohus11Fyrstadskretsen21Gävleborg13Gothenburg19Gotland2Halland10Jämtland5Jönköping13Kalmar10Kopparberg13Kristianstad11Kronoberg7Malmöhus11Norrbotten11Örebro12Östergötland17Skaraborg10Södermanland11Stockholm County33Stockholm Municipality31Uppsala10Värmland12Västerbotten10Västernorrland12Västmanland11Total34915473643820175174
422154
322153
311133
432274
962311110
7131158
75232109
1111
423164
3223
533285
522155
6231167
532165
32243
532165
6121147
6221157
8332189
423164
622156
1394431716
1193441615
4221155
6221157
5121146
6131157
5221156
Source: Statistics Sweden

By municipality

Image:Sweden.1979.coalition.largest.map.svg|Votes by municipality. The municipalities are the color of the party that got the most votes within the coalition that won relative majority. Image:Sweden.1979.coalition.largest.cart.svg|Cartogram of the map to the left with each municipality rescaled to the number of valid votes cast. Image:Sweden.1976.to.1979.coalition.voting.shift.map.svg|Map showing the voting shifts from the 1976 to the 1979 election. Darker blue indicates a municipality voted more towards the parties that formed the centre-right bloc. Darker red indicates a municipality voted more towards the parties that form the left-wing bloc. Image:Sweden.1979.coalition.purple.map.svg|Votes by municipality as a scale from red/Left-wing bloc to blue/Centre-right bloc. Image:Sweden.1979.coalition.purple.cart.svg|Cartogram of vote with each municipality rescaled in proportion to number of valid votes cast. Deeper blue represents a relative majority for the centre-right coalition, brighter red represents a relative majority for the left-wing coalition.

References

References

  1. [[Dieter Nohlen]] & Philip Stöver (2010) ''Elections in Europe: A data handbook'', p1858 {{ISBN. 978-3-8329-5609-7
  2. Nohlen & Stöver, p1873
  3. "Slutdebatter – Partiledardebatt". Sweden Sveriges Television AB, Stockholm.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1979 Swedish general election — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report