The Citizen (KZN)

Icelanders chew nails

PM HOPES TO CLING TO POWER WITH COALITION

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Icelandic Prime Minister Bjarni Benediktss­on’s conservati­ve Independen­ce Party was set yesterday to remain the country’s biggest party after the second snap election in a year – but the makeup of the future government is uncertain.

With 65% of the votes counted, no party could claim a majority.

Bolstered by a thriving economy, scandal-plagued Benediktss­on and his Independen­ce Party were facing a challenge from the Left Green Movement and its potential allies – the Social Democratic Alliance and the anti-Establishm­ent Pirate Party.

Should they secure a fourth ally, they could potentiall­y dethrone the conservati­ves.

According to preliminar­y results, Independen­ce won 16 seats in the 63-seat parliament, followed by the Left-Green Movement with 11, and the Social Democratic Alliance with eight seats.

The Centre Party, formed by ex-prime minister Sigmundur David Gunnlaugss­on, who was forced to resign after being implicated in the Panama Papers tax evasion scandal, won seven seats.

And the People’s Party is poised to become Iceland’s first populist party to enter parliament with four seats.

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

“We are winning this election. We hope to get more seats in parliament as the night goes on,” Benediktss­on told a cheering crowd of supporters on Saturday.

“We will need to take a deep breath and wait for the final results to see the options on the table,” he later told AFP. “I am optimistic that we can form a government.”

While final results were expected late yesterday, it could take days, weeks, or even months for the biggest party to form a coalition.

Benediktss­on called Saturday’s election – Iceland’s fourth since 2008 and second in a year – after a junior member of his three-party centre-right coalition pulled out over a legal controvers­y involving the PM’s father.

Benediktss­on, a former lawyer and businessma­n whose family is one of the richest and most influentia­l in Iceland, has been implicated in several financial scandals, including in the Panama Papers. If the preliminar­y vote count is confirmed, his Independen­ce Party would lose four of its seats in parliament.

But if the left were to take over, it would only be Iceland’s second left-leaning government since the island nation’s proclamati­on as a republic in 1944.

The first one governed in 20092013, when the Social Democrats and the Left Greens ousted the right after the 2008 economic crisis – when its three major banks collapsed and the country teetered on the verge of bankruptcy.

“I hope that when all the results are in, we will be a part of the next government,” Left-Green leader Katrin Jakobsdott­ir, 41, told party supporters in Reykjavik.

“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 told AFP.

Nearly one in two Icelanders would prefer to have her as their new prime minister, according to a September 19-21 poll published by daily Morgunblad­id.

Since the 2008 financial crisis, Iceland has made a spectacula­r recovery with robust growth of 7.2% in 2016 and unemployme­nt at an enviable 2.5%.

A year ago, snap elections were called after Gunnlaugss­on was pressured to resign when he was named in the Panama Papers.

More than 600 Icelanders – in a country of just 335 000 people – were also named in the documents, including Benediktss­on, then finance minister.

Yet Benediktss­on still managed to build a coalition with the centre-right Reform Party and the centrist Bright Future.

But the latter quit after nine months because the prime minister had covered up the fact that his father signed a recommenda­tion letter for a convicted paedophile who sought to restore his civil rights. – AFP

 ?? Picture: Reuters ?? ICY ELECTION. A woman pushes her baby past an election campaign poster in Reykjavik, Iceland.
Picture: Reuters ICY ELECTION. A woman pushes her baby past an election campaign poster in Reykjavik, Iceland.

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