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POLITICS IN SWEDEN

Politics in Sweden: Who is Jessika Roswall, Sweden’s next EU commissioner?

The European Commission in Brussels is made up of commissioners from each of the 27 EU countries, who are replaced every five years following elections to the EU parliament. Sweden’s next EU commissioner will be the fifth woman and the first Moderate Party politician to take on the role.

Politics in Sweden: Who is Jessika Roswall, Sweden’s next EU commissioner?
Jessika Roswall was nominated as Sweden's next EU commissioner on July 8th. Photo: Mikaela Landeström/TT

Who is Jessika Roswall?

Jessika Roswall has been Sweden’s minister for the EU and Nordic cooperation since 2022, so it is perhaps not much of a surprise that she’s been put forward as the country’s next EU commissioner. She is a Moderate from Uppsala, and trained as a lawyer before entering politics.

“I’m extremely honoured and thankful that the Prime Minister has such confidence in me to nominate me,” Roswell said in a press conference announcing her nomination. “It’s an honour to have the opportunity to be Sweden’s next EU commissioner.”

She’s been an MP since 2010 and since then she has worked on the tax committee, the civil affairs committee, and has been a member of the Swedish Consumer Agency’s transparency council. 

She became the Moderate Party’s spokesperson on EU relations in 2019.

What does an EU commissioner actually do?

Despite the fact that member states each appoint their own commissioner, these commissioners are not supposed to represent their own countries, but rather consider the best interests of the EU as a whole. 

They are in charge of proposing new legislation and monitoring member states’ compliance with that legislation, as well as managing EU revenue and expenditure, ensuring there is free competition within the EU and representing the EU in various international negotiations. 

Each commissioner has a different area of responsibility, somewhat similar to ministers in national governments. Sweden’s EU commissioner since December 1st, 2019 is Social Democrat Ylva Johansson, who is responsible for migration and home affairs.

What will Roswall’s role be?

It’s not clear yet – this isn’t something which is decided by countries or commissioners themselves, rather commissioners are assigned a role after negotiations with the Commission’s President, which is currently Ursula von der Leyen.

Three of the five past commissioners have been responsible for home affairs within the EU, one of the most important roles within the EU commission, but that’s by no means a guarantee that Roswall will be assigned the same role.

One of these roles has already been assigned – Estonia’s Prime Minister Kaja Kallas has been proposed as the EU representative for foreign affairs. Portfolios are assigned based on previous experience and knowledge and many EU countries will be putting the pressure on von der Leyen to assign their commissioner an important portfolio.

How many commissioners have there been in Sweden?

Sweden joined the EU in 1995, and the country has had five commissioners since then – all of them women. There have been three Social Democrats – Anita Gradin (1995-99), Margot Wallström (1999-2010) and Ylva Johansson (2019-2024), and one Liberal – Cecilia Malmström (2010-2019).

Jessika Roswall will be the first Moderate politician to take on the role.

When will she start?

Roswall is not strictly EU commissioner for Sweden yet – President von der Leyen, as well as the EU parliament, must approve her appointment first.

This is not just a box-ticking exercise, rather she’ll be grilled by the EU parliament and will be expected to know her stuff, as well as show that she’s the right person for the role, both based on her knowledge and her politics – Malmström and Johansson were both made to answer further questions before their appointments were approved.

Von der Leyen herself also needs to be approved for her second term as President of the EU Commission. The EU parliament will vote on her appointment later in July, and she needs at least 361 ‘yes’ votes to pass. She has strong support from the centre, but it’s by no means a given that this will be enough – she only passed with a 9 vote margin in 2019. 

If she isn’t approved, the EU heads of state will need to hold a new summit and choose a new candidate within a month.

If all goes to plan and both Roswall and von der Leyen’s appointments are approved, Roswall will join the new commissioners in Brussels later this year, on November 1st at the earliest.

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POLITICS IN SWEDEN

Politics in Sweden: Is Jimmie Åkesson really seeking peace with the Social Democrats?

The leader of the far-right Sweden Democrats on Saturday said he was "reaching out a hand" to Magdalena Andersson, leader of the Social Democrats, calling on the two parties to cooperate on issues where they "think alike".

Politics in Sweden: Is Jimmie Åkesson really seeking peace with the Social Democrats?

Perhaps the most powerful signal Denmark’s Social Democrats gave of their shift to the right on immigration five years ago came when their leader, Mette Frederiksen, gave a series of joint interviews with Kristian Thulesen Dahl, the then-leader of the far-right Danish People’s Party. 

Sweden’s Social Democrats have clearly been studying Denmark’s example — particularly in their plan to combat segregation in so-called ‘vulnerable areas’. 

But there’s been no similar peace offering to the far-right. If anything, the Swedish Social Democrats have moved in the opposite direction.

So it was interesting to see the leader of the Sweden Democrats, Jimmie Åkesson, take the initiative on Saturday. 

“I want to, today… reach out a hand,” he said during his annual summer speech in his home town of Sölvesborg. “Please, Magdalena Andersson, can’t we just shake hands and promise to stop this toxic debate?” 

“Let’s put policy at the centre, let’s acknowledge our differences, but cooperate where we think alike. For Sweden – and for the people who live here. I think that would be a good first step in jointly taking responsibility for our country.”

What was he doing? 

This is the party that has long accused the Social Democrats of destroying Sweden by driving an open-door immigration policy. The party which campaigns under the slogan Stoppa sosseriet, (roughly translating as “Stop Social Democracy”), and which was discovered earlier this year to be running a network of fake and anonymous social media accounts – accounts which, among other things, edited speeches of Andersson to make her say “we can crush the whole country, together we can destroy Sweden”.

But according to Åkesson’s speech on Saturday, it was the Social Democrats creating all the rancour. 

“After Magdalena Andersson’s study tour of the USA last year, we have seen how the debate climate in Sweden has changed, been Americanised. The rhetoric has beome sharper, the tone more confrontational,” he said. “No party is completely innocent of this, not even us… but it’s clear that some bear more responsiblity than others.” 

“It is not worthy of our proud country that those of us who are elected stoop so low, insulting or labelling other elected officials or parties. Let’s raise the bar a few notches.” 

It’s hard to know exactly what was behind Åkesson’s more conciliatory tone.

It may be simply an attempt to counter the revelations by TV4 about his party’s use of anonymous troll accounts by claiming to be calling for a less toxic debate climate, or an attempt to stop the Social Democrats referring to his party as “brown” (a reference to the uniforms worn by Hitler’s Brownshirts) and the government as blåbrun, a blue-brown coalition.  

Jonas Hinnfors, a politics professor from Gothenburg University said that the Sweden Democrats are still trying to be fully accepted as a normal political party.

“I think Jimmie Åkesson is trying to achieve two things: Achieve non-pariah status from the Social Democrats as well, not only from the current government parties, as well as diverting the focus on toxic and abusive speech and actions – including the ‘Troll Factory’ – away from the Sweden Democrats, claiming that ‘others are as bad – and let’s all try and improve.'” 

“The party’s long-term ambition is to become a fully accepted party. So far the Social Democrats is a big obstacle in that respect,” he added. 

Nicholas Aylott, associate professor at Södertörn University, said that he suspected Åkesson was trying to counter the impact of his combative reaction after the Troll factory story. 

“He’s become convinced that his intemperate reaction to the troll-factory revelations in May was a bad mistake. He must repair the damage done to the party’s image and its relations with allies,” he speculated. 

But it could also be something more strategic. 

The speech came after the EU elections, which saw the Sweden Democrats’ vote lose ground for the first time in any election they have contested at the national or EU level.

It also came after a poll by Novus for TV4, which showed support for the party crashing by 2.6 percentage points to 17.5 percent. In the same poll, the Social Democrats gained 3.6 percentage points, taking them to 34.2 percent, and the opposition block pulled ahead of the government and the Sweden Democrats with 55 percent of the vote.

“It could be that the spring events following the TV4 revelations are beginning to feed through to the voters,” Hinnfors said. “Some recent polls have shown drops in support and the EU elections were a real disappointment.” 

Is Åkesson starting to hedge his bets and open up the possibility of cooperating with the Social Democrats should they win the next election in 2026? Is he hoping that the rethink of immigration and integration policy being led by the Social Democrats’ rising star Lawen Redar might push the party towards the Sweden Democrats, or at least towards policies where they can cooperate?

SEE ALSO: What’s in the Social Democrats’ plan to eradicate Sweden’s ‘vulnerable areas’? 

And if Åkesson is serious in his call to “cooperate where we think alike”, how will the Social Democrats respond? 

It’s worth remembering that in Denmark, the Social Democrats’ decision to embrace the Danish People Party started a long process that has ended with the former far-right kingmaker of Danish politics being literally decimated in coming elections.

Politics in Sweden is The Local’s weekly analysis, guide or look ahead to what’s coming up in Swedish politics. Update your newsletter settings to receive it directly to your inbox. 

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