We've had a two-block system since the dawn of time, it feels. There's the left and there's the right. Yes, there are the greens as well, but they are basically a support party for the left, for all practical purposes. It used to be that one of these two would win an election and rule the country for three or four years. There would be a couple of gentlemen's agreements to keep the calm in times when a particular vote might be close and upset the balance, but most of the time, either the right or the left would govern.
Until this week when a right-wing extremist party, the Swedish Democrats, elected into Parliament eight years ago and now growing strong enough to tip the balance in Parliament, decided to ignore the old unspoken gentlemen's agreements and voted down the recently elected left minority government's budget proposition by voting for the other side's shadow budget. And not just that; they've now announced that they will bring down *every* budget by *every* government until their demands about a more restrictive migration policy are met.
See, until now both blocks made sure never to include the Swedish Democrats in any decision. They've negotiated agreements between themselves and managed to keep the Swedish Democrats out of the loop. That is, until now.
The new budget was voted down, bringing about a re-election in a few months. From the looks of it, the re-election will not change anything, it will only cause a new crisis in a few months' time.
I know. It's not nearly as dramatic as some of the global politics you can hear all about on CNN--we haven't really made it there yet--but it's a completely new situation for us.