Sweden's first female PM resigns hours after appointment
Sweden's first ever female prime minister has resigned just
hours after she was appointed.
Magdalena Andersson, was announced as leader on Wednesday
but resigned after her coalition partner quit the government and her budget
failed to pass.
Instead, parliament voted for a budget drawn-up by the
opposition which includes the anti-immigrant far right.
"I have told the speaker that I wish to resign,"
Ms Andersson told reporters.
Her coalition partner, the Greens Party said it could not
accept a budget "drafted for the first time with the far-right".
Ms Andersson said that she hoped to try to become prime
minister again as a single party government leader.
"There is a constitutional practice that a coalition
government should resign when one party quits," the Social Democrat said
on Wednesday. "I don't want to lead a government whose legitimacy will be
questioned.
The speaker of parliament said he would contact party
leaders on the next move.
Ms Andersson was elected as prime minister earlier on
Wednesday because under Swedish law, she only needed a majority of MPs not to
vote against her.
A hundred years after Swedish women were given the vote, the
54-year-old Social Democrat leader was given a standing ovation by sections of
the parliament, or Riksdag.
Her election at the head of a minority government followed an 11th-hour deal with the opposition Left party, in exchange for higher pensions for many Swedes. She also secured the support of coalition partner the Greens.
Of the 349 members of the Riksdag, 174 voted against her.
But on top of the 117 MPs who backed Ms Andersson, a further 57 abstained,
giving her victory by a single vote.
A former junior swimming champion from the university city
of Uppsala, she began her political career in 1996 as political adviser to
then-Prime Minister Goran Persson. She has spent the past seven years as
finance minister.
Before MPs backed Magdalena Andersson, Sweden was the only
Nordic state never to have a woman as PM.
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