2011-10-17

An up-date regarding the Swedish Social Democratic Party

On behalf of Dr Aylott:

The agony of the Swedish Social Democratic Party just gets worse. Until a year ago, the party had managed with just six leaders since the 1930s. Soon it is likely to be looking for its third within a few months. The latest incumbent, Håkan Juholt, put on a brave performance at Wednesday's party-leaders debate in parliament. But he surely cannot recover sufficient authority to retain his job for long.

 

The immediate cause of Juholt's predicament might induce déjà vu in British observers. Late last week, the left-leaning tabloid Aftonbladet revealed that he had over-claimed the accommodation expenses to which a member of parliament is entitled – an eerily similar offence to that which snared so many MPs at Westminster two years ago. He confesses to no more than severe carelessness. But when exactly he became aware of the discrepancy is now – to his party's excruciating embarrassment – the subject of a preliminary investigation by the Prosecution Authority.

 

What all but seals Juholt's fate, though, is that his expenses are only the latest in a remarkable series of blunders since he became party leader only last spring.

 

His tendency to make hasty, ill-considered policy soon became all too apparent. His position on Sweden's contribution to the Western intervention in Libya over the summer changed frequently and wildly. Within the last fortnight, his draft shadow-budget caused uproar in his parliamentary group when it turned out to have little in common with his earlier left-wing signals. Party statements on the ultra-sensitive topic of immigration were spectacularly bungled. A television debate between party leaders was boycotted on flimsy grounds. Media commentators speculate that leading Social Democrats may have leaked the expenses stories, calculating that short-term calamity might be worth enduring if it ends Juholt's disastrously misjudged leadership.

 

The question for a political scientist has to be: how did it come to this? How did what is still Sweden's biggest party, which nearly monopolised government for so long, end up in such chaos?

 

European social democracy faces all sorts of long-term challenges. But I think that the Swedish party's travails have a lot to do with its own institutions, and particularly how it chooses it leaders.

 

Swedish parties, like many Swedish organisations, are wary of internal competition for leadership positions. When a vacancy arises, the task of filling it is usually delegated to a selection committee (valberedning), which, having conferred and consulted, will frequently recommend only a single candidate for broader confirmation. This can be a perfectly effective method of choosing leaders. But the Social Democrats have persisted with it, and in an extreme form, in entirely unsuitable circumstances.

 

This is a party that desperately needs an open, frank debate about its direction. Should it shift towards the centre and chase middle-class voters? Or should it rediscover what some would see as its ideological core and move left instead? Either option is quite conceivable and legitimate. The party just needs to decide which to take.

 

Choosing a leader would, in most other Western parties, offer an excellent opportunity to do just this. Party members would simply opt for a candidate that championed one path or the other. In Sweden, however, aspiring Social Democratic leaders are, by tradition, not supposed to pitch for the top job. Instead, they should wait for the party, in the form of the selection committee, to call. Since the Social Democrats lost the 2006 election, party members have thus never had the chance express their views in a leadership ballot – or perhaps even to decide what their views really are.

 

Just as bad, the leader who they eventually got in March was probably quite unprepared. Rather than bridging the Social Democrats' ideological factions, the selection committee seemed paralysed by them. Each of the main leadership contenders was consistently blocked by the party's left or its right. Juholt's emergence as a compromise figure, at almost the last minute, probably left him as amazed as anyone else. His party should not have been surprised, then, if he didn't have a thought-through vision of what he would do as leader, nor the managerial skill to implement such a vision. Until then, he had never really needed either.

 

The old selection method worked fine when the party was in government. What the party wanted when it changed leader was clear enough. A manifesto had previously been agreed by the party, endorsed by the electorate and formed the basis of a government programme. The new leader, always an experienced cabinet minister, was already signed up to it.

 

In opposition, however, the mandate for a new party leader is much less obvious. The previous election manifesto is, in practice, void after its rejection by voters. A different type of choice by the party is necessary. The Social Democrats' failure to change their way of choosing helps to explain why the last two selections, both made in opposition, have turned out so badly.

 

In fact, there is a simple way forward for the party. Without abandoning the selection-committee model entirely, two other Swedish parties have recently chosen new leaders in a more open way, with different candidates competing openly and offering distinct pledges on where they wished to take their parties. Doing something similar would force Social Democrats to decide what they want and, by definition, produce a leader in tune with that decision. Will this 122-year-old party be bold enough to break with its past in this way?

 

Nicholas Aylott 2011-10-13

 

A version of this article appeared in the Local on October 13 (www.thelocal.se/36724/20111013/

 

 

2011-09-29

Call for papers REMINDER

Workshop – Call for papers

 

We, the specialist group in Scandinavian Politics, will hold a workshop on the 13th of December 2011 here at Karlstad University, Sweden.

 

Workshop Theme: Scandinavian Politics

 

Format of the Workshop: It will be a discussion based workshop.

 

If you would like to participate please send an abstract to malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se

 

Deadline: 7th of October 2011.

 

 

PSA Annual Conference 2012 – Call for papers

 

Calls for papers to the PSA Annual Conference in Belfast 2012 has been launched http://www.psa.ac.uk/2012/

 

The specialist group can put forward panel proposals to the conference and we aim to do so after the success we had at the 2011 Annual Conference.

 

Send paper abstracts to malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se

 

Deadline: 7th of October 2011.

 

If you have any questions or queries please contact Malin or Lee (lee.miles@kau.se)

 

Autumn greetings Karlstad, Sweden

 

Malin & Lee

 

 

_______________________________________________________________________
Malin Stegmann McCallion                                      Dr Malin Stegmann McCallion
Fil Dr, Universitetslektor                                           Senior Lecturer/Assistant Professor 
Statsvetenskap                                                             Political Science
Karlstads universitet                                                   Karlstad University
Universitetsgatan 2                                                     Universitetsgatan 2
651 88 Karlstad                                                              651 88 Karlstad
                                                                                            Sweden

E-post: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se      Email: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se
Tel: 054 – 700 1205                                                       Telephone: +46 (0)54 700 1205

 

 

2011-09-05

workshop and conference - call for papers

Welcome back to the Academic Year 2011-2012 and new exciting meetings of the Specialist Group on Scandinavian Politics.

 

Workshop – Call for papers

We, the specialist group in Scandinavian Politics, will hold a workshop on the 13th of December 2011 here at Karlstad University.

Workshop Theme: Scandinavian Politics

Format of the Workshop: It will be a discussion based workshop.

If you would like to participate please send an abstract to malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se

Deadline: 7th of October 2011.

 

PSA Annual Conference 2012 – Call for papers

Calls for papers to the PSA Annual Conference in Belfast 2012 has been launched http://www.psa.ac.uk/2012/

The specialist group can put forward panel proposals to the conference and we aim to do so after the success we had at the 2011 Annual Conference.

Send paper abstracts to malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se

Deadline: 7th of October 2011.

 

If you have any questions or queries please contact Malin or Lee (lee.miles@kau.se)

 

Autumn greetings Karlstad, Sweden

Malin & Lee

 

 

_______________________________________________________________________
Malin Stegmann McCallion                                      Dr Malin Stegmann McCallion
Fil Dr, Universitetslektor                                           Senior Lecturer/Assistant Professor 
Statsvetenskap                                                             Political Science
Karlstads universitet                                                   Karlstad University
Universitetsgatan 2                                                     Universitetsgatan 2
651 88 Karlstad                                                              651 88 Karlstad
                                                                                            Sweden

E-post: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se      Email: malin.stegmann-mccallion@kau.se
Tel: 054 – 700 1205                                                       Telephone: +46 (0)54 700 1205

 

 

2011-04-05

VB: Workshop on 'Impact of Engagement

On behalf of Political Studies Association.

 

Från: Sandra McDonagh [mailto:sandra.mcdonagh@newcastle.ac.uk]
Skickat: den 4 april 2011 16:12

Ämne: Workshop on 'Impact of Engagement

 

Dear Specialist Group Convenor 

 

Would you please inform your members of the following:

 

At a time when academics increasingly need to consider the wider “impact” of their research, greater consideration needs to be given to the ways in which academic research can help shape and inform the policy-making process and the practical measures that academics need to take to ensure their work is heard, understood and acted upon by the appropriate decision-makers. To this end the Political Studies Association has decided to run a free workshop on “Impact and Engagement” at the Novotel London West, London W11 on Monday, 18th April (the day before the start of its annual conference).

 

The workshop will consist of three sessions:

 

Session 1: Engaging the Media (10-11.30am)

Sue Cameron, Financial Times, tbc

Professor Phil Cowley, University of Nottingham

Martin Rosenbaum, Producer, BBC Radio 4

Nadine Smith, Head of Communications, Institute for Government

 

Session 2: Engaging Parliament and Government (11.30am-1.00pm)

Professor Archie Brown, Oxford University

Paul Evans, Principal Clerk for Select Committees, House of Commons

Professor Iain McLean, Oxford University

Baroness Parminter, Liberal Democrat working peer and former Chief Executive of the Campaign to Protect Rural England

 

Session 3: International Intervention case Study (2-3.30pm)

Sir Mike Aaronson, visiting Professor at University of Surrey and former Director General of Save the Children UK

 

If you are interested in registering for the workshop please contact sue.forster@ncl.ac.uk

 

Best wishes

 

Sandra

 

Sandra McDonagh

Political Studies Association

Politics

Newcastle University

Newcastle upon Tyne

NE1 7RU

Tel: 0191 222 8021

Fax: 0191 222 3499

Mob: 07966 360031

www.psa.ac.uk

 

2011-03-11

The Swedish Social Democrats' search for a new leader took a decisive and dramatic turn yesterday.

On behalf of Nicholas Aylott:

 

The Swedish Social Democrats' search for a new leader took a decisive and dramatic turn yesterday. The party's selection committee nominated Håkan Juholt as its preferred candidate. He and the nominee to the position of secretary-general, Carin Jämtin, will almost certainly be confirmed by a special party congress in a couple of weeks.

Juholt is the party's defence spokesman and chair of its Kalmar region, in the south-east, where it is relatively strong. Still, his nomination is an absolute sensation. He has no ministerial experience. Until the last couple of days, he had almost never been mentioned in the media as a serious candidate. What seems to have happened, according to reports, is that the coalition of left-leaning party regions fell in behind him at the last minute, and the looser coalition of right-leaning regions broke up. Enough of the latter group found him acceptable to leave the most right-wing regions too isolated to resist the selection committee's proposal.

Juholt is by no means a mad choice. He has both a presence in the Social Democratic parliamentary group and a strong base in its organisation. He is a talented debator. He has an agreeable, down-to-earth personality and a tremendous moustache. His only enemies within the party appear to be the previous leader and secretary-general, which hardly matters now.

His greatest advantage right now, though, is that no one really knows what he thinks on most central political issues. He has said enough to make the party's left back him, but little more than that, which, in the end, made him sufficiently broadly acceptable among the Social Democratic power-brokers.

It might not be an advantage for much longer, though. It may be thought fairly remarkable, and perhaps sub-optimal, that a party facing huge, historic challenges is about to elect a leader without having any real idea about how he plans to address those challenges. He will thus have no clear mandate to do anything at all.

Nicholas Aylott 2011-03-11

2011-03-09

Swedish Social Democratic Party is choosing a new Party leader

An update on what is happening within the Swedish Social Democratic Party:

 

The Swedish Social Democrats' selection of a new leader to replace Mona Sahlin has induced the most acute crisis in the 122-year history of possibly the most successful political party in the world. It is fascinating for several reasons.

 

For one thing, the party's peculiar method of choosing its leader now looks woefully dated. Basically, a "selection committee", a group of Social Democratic elders, takes soundings from all levels of the party and then proposes a single candidate who it thinks will be most acceptable to all. This candidate is then confirmed at a party congress.

 

This method might seem odd, but it is used in all Swedish parties – and indeed, in many Swedish organisations. Still, the Social Democrats have developed an extreme form, in which, by custom, no candidate should even express his or her leadership ambitions before being nominated by the selection committee. Of the three likeliest current contenders, one has said that, if he were asked by the selection committee to lead the party, he would give it serious consideration. Another wrote on Facebook that he wants to contribute to the party's renewal in some sort of leading position. The third has just kept completely quiet.

 

In my view, this tradition can be explained partly by the fear that open internal conflict might damage the party's competitiveness, but also by the Social Democrats' special character. The party comprises a broad and complex coalition of ideological tendencies, regional interests and material interests (such as unions), not to mention men and women. This requires decisions, including leadership appointments, that are elaborately negotiated and that keep all these tendencies and interests broadly satisfied. The tradition of negotiated solutions runs deep in the party. In a phrase that will surely become someone's book title, the chair of the Social Democrats' current selection committee dismissed the idea of more open competition between leadership candidates by declaring (to translate the quote into British English), "This isn't the X-Factor, you know."

 

The trouble is, this time the Social Democrats are failing to negotiate a solution. Just a couple of weeks before the special congress that is due to confirm the new leader, the field remains, astonishingly, wide open.

 

This is basically because the party is fundamentally split over how to respond to its historic setbacks. Should it try to recapture the median voter as soon as possible - that is, to move rightwards? Or should it instead retain (or even revive) its radicalism and, secondarily, seek to persuade the median voter to shift to the left? This is an acute dilemma for social democrats, and it is hardly unique to Swedish ones. Still, an open competition between candidates, each with his or her own platform, might have forced the party as a whole to choose between these options. The winning candidate would then have had some sort of mandate to pursue one course or the other. But open competition has not been allowed. Many Social Democrats are now expressing dismay at how the selection committee has conducted the process.

 

Meanwhile, there is an interesting riposte here to the prevailing theories of the unstoppable rise of the party in public office – that is, MPs and ministers – and the marginalisation of members and activists. Now, this particular case study hardly falsifies such theories. But it does give pause for thought. Press reports suggest that the Social Democrats' selection committee has essentially mediated between the party's regional units, which, at every stage, have a decisive role in the selection of a leader. For now, at least, it is firmly in the party organisation that the action is taking place.

 

And, in fact, this might well be part of the party's problem. The Social Democrats' huge challenge is to win back support in the big cities, which fell to a little over a fifth of Stockholm voters in the election last autumn. But the party's decline in the capital has transferred internal power to the less urban party regions, which have more members, and which may prioritise quite different issues to those that concern Stockholmers. The phrase "vicious circle" springs to mind.

 

So who will get the job? The Swedish papers are having great fun printing the pictures of the three bespectacled male MPs who are apparently likeliest to get the nod, and it's true that, from some angles, they do look pretty similar. In fairness, the youngest of them, Mikael Damberg, who is also chair of the party's Stockholm region, has a bit of flair. But he has declined to moderate his clear and long-held preference for taking the party towards the political midfield, which seems to have made him persona non grata to some of the other party regions, especially from the far south and the midlands.

 

At this late stage, then, three scenarios seem plausible. (1) Perhaps most likely is an 11th-hour package deal in which Damberg's hitherto implacable opponents would be bought off with the appointment of left-wingers – and women – to other leading positions in the party. (The party's secretary-general, a man, resigned on Sunday, perhaps facilitating such an outcome.) Or (2) the selection committee might despair of finding a long-term leader, which pretty much the entire party has said that it wants, and, as a short-term fix, it would instead propose the most experienced and inoffensive of the three likely lads. Or (3), if the current deadlock really can't be broken, a wild card may emerge at the last minute, perhaps someone like Per Nuder, who is among those who have hitherto insisted that they are not interested in the job. Perhaps they didn't really mean that.

 

Needless to say, none of these scenarios involves favourable circumstances for a new party leader.

 

Nicholas Aylott 2011-03-08

 

2011-02-28

PSA Scandinavian Politics Specialist Group AGM

Dear Scandinavian Politics Specialist Group Member,

 

Please find the date for this year’s AGM and agenda attached. If there is any other business you wish to bring up onto the agenda please email Malin before the 25th of March 2011.

 

Malin & Lee

 

 

VB: PSA News PSA Executive Committee Vacancies 2011

For your information.

Malin & Lee

 

Från: members-bounces@psa.ac.uk [mailto:members-bounces@psa.ac.uk] För PSA News
Skickat: den 28 februari 2011 12:33
Till: members@psa.ac.uk
Ämne: PSA News PSA Executive Committee Vacancies 2011

 

psa_logo_pos.jpg

 

Executive Committee Vacancies 2011

Notice is hereby given that nominations are invited from members wishing to stand for the post of trustee or Honorary Secretary of the Executive Committee of the Political Studies Association.

Vacancies exist for three trustees to serve for terms of three years beginning on 9th July 2011. In addition, due to the resignation of Dr Andrew Russell, a by-election will be held for the post of trustee for one year beginning on 9th July 2011.

The post of Honorary Secretary is for a two year term beginning on 9th July 2011.

The nomination form, available here [Word[ [pdf], proposed and seconded by Political Studies Association members, should be posted or e-mailed to the Returning Officer, Professor Paul Whiteley, at the address below, by Friday 8th April at 12 noon:

Professor Paul Whiteley

Political Studies Association

30 Tabernacle Street

London EC2A 4UE

 

e-mail: nominations@psa.ac.uk

 

If the number of nomination exceeds the number of vacancies, an election by postal ballot of the whole membership will be held.

 

 

The Political Studies Association is committed to the principles of gender equality and to encouraging candidates from a diverse range of backgrounds. While taking full account of equal opportunities, nominations are particularly welcome from groups currently under-represented on the Executive Committee, such as ethnic minorities and the disabled. At the same time candidates should be aware that we expect membership of the Executive Committee to entail significant responsibilities and a substantial time commitment.

 

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