List of members of the Riksdag, 2010–2014
This is a list of members of the Swedish parliament for the term 2010–2014. The MPs were elected in the general election held on 19 September 2010 and took office on 4 October 2010.[1] The next general election, when a new parliament will be elected, is scheduled to take place in 2014.
Composition
Parties currently in the government are marked in bold.
Party/bloc | Seats | Party leader(s) | Parliamentary group leader(s) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Social Democrats | 112 | Stefan Löfven | Mikael Damberg | ||
Moderate | 107 | Fredrik Reinfeldt | Anna Kinberg Batra | ||
Green | 25 | Åsa Romson, Gustav Fridolin (spokespersons) |
Mehmet Kaplan, Gunvor G Ericson | ||
Liberals | 24 | Jan Björklund | Johan Pehrson | ||
Centre | 23 | Annie Lööf | Anders W Jonsson | ||
Sweden Democrats | 20 | Jimmie Åkesson | Björn Söder | ||
Left | 19 | Jonas Sjöstedt | Hans Linde | ||
Christian Democrats | 19 | Göran Hägglund | Emma Henriksson | ||
The Alliance (Moderate, Liberals, Centre, Christian Democrats) |
173 | ||||
Red-Greens (Social Democrats, Green, Left) |
156 | ||||
Total | 349 | ||||
Government minority | 2 |
List of elected MPs
Facts about the elected MPs
- Youngest MP: William Petzäll (born 1988).[1]
- Oldest MP: Barbro Westerholm (born 1933).[1]
- Longest serving MP: Per Westerberg (since 1977).[2]
- Gender balance: 192 (55%) men and 157 (45%) women.[1]
- Number of MPs who have never served in the parliament before: 106.[1]
- Number of MPs who served in the parliament during the previous term: 233.[1]
- Number of MPs have who served as MPs or substitutes during any other previous terms: 10.[1]
References
- "Den nya riksdagen efter valet" (Press release) (in Swedish). Parliament of Sweden. 24 September 2010. Retrieved 2010-09-29.
- "Upprop och val av talman" (in Swedish). Parliament of Sweden. Retrieved 28 September 2010.
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