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Scandal-hit PM wins election

Benediktss­on overcomes problems and set to lead Iceland again

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We have eight parties in parliament and right now there doesn’t seem to be any obvious majority. All parties are open p for discussion.

Katrin Jakobsdott­ir

REYkJAVIk: Iceland’s conservati­ve prime minister came out on top in a snap election despite a string of scandals, final results have confirmed, but it remained unclear whether he will be able to form a viable coalition.

Bjarni Benediktss­on, 47, was named last year in the “Panama Papers” worldwide taxevasion leaks. He has also been accused of wrongdoing during Iceland’s financial collapse in 2008.

His Independen­ce Party, however, beat its rivals in Saturday’s election, according to final results published on Sunday, although no party came near to winning a majority in parliament.

The Independen­ce Party won 16 seats in the 63seat parliament. Turnout was 81%.

It could now take days, weeks or even months before Iceland has a new government in place as thorny coalition negotiatio­ns await.

Benediktss­on’s challenge comes from the Left Green Movement and its potential allies, the Social Democratic Alliance and the antiestabl­ishment Pirate Party.

The LeftGreen Movement came in second with 11 seats, the Social Democratic Alliance with seven seats, and the Pirates with six seats.

A total of eight parties won seats in parliament.

Iceland’s President Gudni Johannesso­n has invited the leader of each of those parties to his residence yesterday. After meeting them individual­ly, he will decide who gets the first mandate to try to assemble a government.

Under the Icelandic system, the president, who holds a largely ceremonial role, usually tasks the leader of the biggest party with putting a government together.

“I am optimistic that we can form a government,” Benediktss­on said after the polls closed on Saturday.

The Independen­ce Party lost five seats in parliament, according to Sunday’s results, but still came out on top – apparently helped by Iceland’s thriving economy, fuelled by a flourishin­g tourism sector.

The party has been involved in almost every government in Iceland since 1980.

But growing public distrust of the elite has spawned several antiestabl­ishment parties.

These have splintered the political landscape and made it increasing­ly difficult to form a stable government.

Benediktss­on’s main rival, the LeftGreen Movement won fewer votes than expected. It will need at least five allies to form a 32seat majority to dethrone the conservati­ves.

If it manages to do so, it would form only the second leftleanin­g government in Iceland since the country’s proclamati­on as a republic in 1944.

“I’m worried that we may have to face up to the likelihood of long, drawnout discussion­s and attempts to form a government,” said Arnar Thor Jonsson, a law professor at Reykjavik University.

Negotiatio­ns to form a coalition after the October 2016 election took three months.

Some voters are tired. It was Iceland’s fourth election since 2008 and the second in a year.

”I hope we will have more stable politics now... but I’m rather pessimisti­c about it,” said Einar Orn Thorlacius, a lawyer in Reykjavik.

Benediktss­on called Saturday’s election after a junior member of his centrerigh­t coalition pulled out over accusation­s that the prime minister had covered up his father’s recom mendation letter for a convicted paedophile to help “restore his honour”.

Benediktss­on is a former lawyer and businessma­n whose family is one of the richest and most influentia­l in Iceland.

He has been implicated in several financial scandals and was mentioned in the Panama Papers – leaked documents that exposed offshore tax havens.

That scandal forced the resignatio­n of then prime minister Sigmundur David Gunnlaugss­on.

Gunnlaugss­on made a comeback to lead one of the new parties that ran in Saturday’s election.

Analysts said the strongest possible government would be a threeparty coalition comprising the two biggest parties, the Independen­ce and the LeftGreens – but their clashing ideologies make such a collaborat­ion unlikely.

LeftGreen leader Katrin Jakobsdott­ir, 41, said on election night she was keeping all options open.

“We have eight parties in parliament and right now there doesn’t seem to be any obvious majority. All parties are open for discussion,” she said.

Her campaign promises included investing in social infrastruc­ture and ensuring that Iceland’s economic prosperity reaches the healthcare and education sectors. — AFP

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