Iceland’s Social Democrats are on track to win the country’s snap election,
according to partial results published Sunday, as voters seemingly rejected
incumbent parties.
The center-left Social Democratic Alliance had won 21 percent of the vote,
securing 15 seats in the 63-seat parliament, according to an early tally
reported by Iceland’s broadcaster RÚV.
It was followed by the conservative Independence Party, which won 19 percent and
14 seats, and the centrist Liberal Reform Party with 11 seats and 16 percent of
votes, according to the report.
Icelanders headed to the polls on Saturday with the issues of immigration,
energy policy and the economy playing a central role in the election, according
to AP.
European Union membership also resurfaced in the campaign for the first time in
more than a decade, Reuters reported, with public support for joining the bloc
reaching 45 percent.
Iceland’s Prime Minister Bjarni Benediktsson dissolved the parliament in October
and called the snap election, citing growing disagreements among the three
governing parties — his Independence Party, the Progressive Party and the
Left-Greens. All three parties in the outgoing government appeared to have lost
votes.
Tag - Icelandic politics
Iceland’s coalition government has collapsed, with a snap election likely to be
held next month, the prime minister announced Sunday.
Icelandic Prime Minister Bjarni Benediktsson cited policy disagreements on
issues ranging from economic to energy policy as the reason for the country’s
three-party coalition government breaking up, and said an early election was the
only option.
“I consider that I would be failing myself, the party members and the people of
the country by pretending to be able to lead the government forward when we do
not reach a conclusion on the issues that matter most to people,” Benediktsson
said in a statement on social media.
“I therefore see no other option in this situation than to leave the future to
the will of the voters,” he added.
The Nordic country has been governed by a coalition consisting of the
conservative Independence Party, led by Benediktsson; the center-right
Progressive Party; and the left-wing Left-Green Movement since 2021.
Benediktsson became prime minister in April after former Prime Minister Katrín
Jakobsdóttir of the Left-Green Movement resigned to run for the presidency,
which she did not win.
Benediktsson met with Icelandic President Halla Tómasdóttir on Monday to
formally request parliament’s dissolution and call an early parliamentary
election “at the end of November.” Tómasdóttir said she would speak with party
leaders and make a decision about when to call the election later this week,
according to Icelandic media.
If an election is held next month, it would be the first November vote in almost
a century.
Iceland was recently rocked by volcanic eruptions which forced thousands of
residents in the southwest of the country to evacuate their homes and
contributed to high inflation.