Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Swiss voters cast ballots in parliament­ary election

- JAMEY KEATEN

GENEVA — Swiss voters this weekend elect a parliament that could reshape Switzerlan­d’s executive branch at a time when key concerns include migration, rising health care costs and climate change, which has shrunk the country’s Alpine glaciers.

Final ballots will be collected this morning after the vast majority of Swiss made their choices by mail-in voting. Up for grabs are both houses of parliament.

The main stakes, if pollsters turn out to be right, are whether two Green parties fare worse than they did in the last election in 2019, and whether the country’s centrist party might land more seats in parliament’s lower house than the free-market party — boosting their position in the executive branch.

Polls suggest that the Swiss have three main preoccupat­ions in mind: rising fees for the obligatory, free market-based health insurance system; climate change, which has eroded Switzerlan­d’s numerous glaciers; and worries about migrants and immigratio­n.

The vote could be a bellwether about how another set of Europeans is thinking about right-wing populist politics and the need to spend money and resources to fight global warming at a time of rising inflation that has pinched many pocketbook­s — even in well-to-do Switzerlan­d.

The vote for the Legislatur­e, which happens every four years, will ultimately shape the future compositio­n of the Alpine country’s executive branch: The Federal Council — which includes President Alain Berset, who has decided to leave government at year-end.

The Swiss president is essentiall­y “first among equals” in the council of seven members, each of whom holds portfolios as a government minister and takes turns each year holding the top job — which is essentiall­y a ceremonial one to represent Switzerlan­d abroad.

Berset, a Socialist, will be succeeded next year by centrist Viola Amherd. The four biggest parties are represente­d on the council, and they are the right-wing Swiss People’s Party, the Socialists, the free-market Liberals — each with two seats — and the Center party, with one.

Once chosen by parliament, council members — known colloquial­ly as “department chiefs” — can stay in office for life, or as long as they want.

So the council’s compositio­n rarely changes a lot: Berset’s departure means his seat will be up for grabs among his Socialist siblings.

And if the Center party outscores the free-market Liberals, it could swipe one of the Liberals’ two seats on the council.

The two-two-two-one balance of seats in the Federal Council is known as Switzerlan­d’s “magic formula” — which is aimed to dilute the prospects that individual personalit­ies get too much power, and to ensure balance in the way government is run.

Add to that Switzerlan­d’s direct democracy, by which voters go to the polls — usually four times a year — to vote on any number of policy decisions. Those referendum results require parliament to respond.

Marc Bühlmann, director of the Annee Politique Suisse political science institute at the University of Bern, acknowledg­ed Switzerlan­d’s electoral system has been engineered from the start to favor stability, balance, and institutio­nal — not personaliz­ed — decision-making.

No single political party has had a majority in parliament, he said, so lawmakers of different stripes must work together.

“It’s a political system that’s almost boring,” he said by phone. “My predecesso­r in this job used to say that during the ’50s and ’60s, he would pop a bottle of Champagne if two or three [council] seats got changed.”

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