Analysis of General matters (8), education policy (1), healthcare policy (2) across 15 documents in Sweden's Riksdag
Interpellation Debates
Opposition MPs have filed 15 interpellations demanding ministerial accountability. These formal parliamentary questions reveal the scrutiny priorities of opposition parties and the pressure facing government ministers.
Opposition Strategy
Interpellations from 4 different parties demonstrate coordinated parliamentary oversight and demands for government accountability.
Thematic Analysis
General matters (8)
Rättssäkerheten inom rättsväsendet
Filed by: Elsa Widding (independent)
Target minister: Justitieminister Gunnar Strömmer (M)
Published:
Interpellation 2025/26:441 Rättssäkerheten inom rättsväsendet av Elsa Widding till Justitieminister Gunnar Strömmer (M) Förfarandet att låta jurister utan medverkan av icke-jurister få granska och döma jurister tillåts ske i tvistemål i allmänna domstolar där ena parten i målet utgörs av jurister och därtill centrala
Why It Matters: Independent MP Elsa Widding escalates a constitutional challenge: Justice Minister Strömmer's written question response (frs 2025/26:503) cited existing jäv rules but commissioned zero new analysis. With lawyers judging lawyers in four distinct procedural domains — civil courts, the Special Prosecutor Chamber, Bar Association discipline, and JK oversight — Widding forces Strömmer to answer whether Sweden's legal self-policing system meets the Regeringsform's objectivity and impartiality standards. A non-partisan challenge that cannot be dismissed as election tactics. [HD10441, frs 2025/26:441, confidence: HIGH]
Lönetransparensdirektivet
Filed by: Sofia Amloh (S)
Published:
Interpellation 2025/26:437 Lönetransparensdirektivet av Sofia Amloh (S) till Jämställdhetsminister Nina Larsson (L) Lönegapet i Sverige är bestående och har till och med ökat de senaste åren. I andra EU-länder är gapet större än i Sverige, och kvinnors möjligheter att delta på arbetsmarknaden är sämre. EU:s lönetransparensdirektiv
Why It Matters: Sweden faces EU infringement proceedings if it fails to transpose the EU Pay Transparency Directive by June 7, 2026 — just 47 days away. Gender Equality Minister Nina Larsson (L) must explain both the transposition timeline and why Sweden's gender pay gap has widened in recent years rather than narrowed. This is not a political question but a legal countdown: the EU Commission is monitoring member state compliance and Sweden is among the laggards. [HD10437, frs 2025/26:437, confidence: HIGH]
Nedläggning av kvinnojourer
Filed by: Sofia Amloh (S)
Published:
Interpellation 2025/26:438 Nedläggning av kvinnojourer av Sofia Amloh (S) till Jämställdhetsminister Nina Larsson (L) I arbetet med att bekämpa mäns våld mot kvinnor är de idéburna organisationerna för kvinnofridsarbetet viktiga och grundläggande. Nu ser vi att många kvinnojourer runt om i landet läggs ned, och det
Why It Matters: Sweden's network of women's shelters — the front-line infrastructure for survivors of domestic violence — is collapsing as civil society organizations lose funding and close facilities. Sofia Amloh (S) filed this interpellation on the same day as HD10437 against the same minister Nina Larsson, creating a "minister failing women on two fronts" narrative: simultaneously missing an EU pay equality deadline and overseeing mass shelter closures. Response deadline is May 5, 2026. [HD10438, frs 2025/26:438, confidence: HIGH]
Åtgärder för att stärka den svenska rymdbranschen
Filed by: Mats Wiking (S)
Published:
Interpellation 2025/26:436 Åtgärder för att stärka den svenska rymdbranschen av Mats Wiking (S) till Gymnasie-, högskole- och forskningsminister Lotta Edholm (L) Under de senaste 15 åren har rymdens betydelse för samhället ökat kraftigt. I dag är många samhällsfunktioner beroende av data från satelliter, och kriget
Why It Matters: Sweden's space industry has strategic dual-use significance: satellite data underpins military surveillance, disaster response, and national security. Mats Wiking (S) notes that while space's societal importance has grown enormously over 15 years, Sweden lacks a coordinated national space strategy. Note: This interpellation has since been reported as withdrawn ("Återtagen") before receiving a ministerial response. [HD10436, frs 2025/26:436, confidence: MEDIUM]
Mordet på den svenske diplomaten och FN-medlaren Folke Bernadotte
Filed by: Jamal El-Haj (independent)
Target minister: Utrikesminister Maria Malmer Stenergard (M)
Published:
Interpellation 2025/26:435 Mordet på den svenske diplomaten och FN-medlaren Folke Bernadotte av Jamal El-Haj till Utrikesminister Maria Malmer Stenergard (M) Mordet på den svenske diplomaten och FN-medlaren Folke Bernadotte den 17 september 1948 utgör ett av de mest uppmärksammade politiska attentaten i modern svensk
Why It Matters: Jamal El-Haj (independent) demands that Foreign Minister Maria Malmer Stenergard press Israel for accountability for the 1948 assassination of Swedish diplomat and UN mediator Folke Bernadotte — connecting Swedish diplomatic history to the current Gaza crisis. The interpellation raises a pointed question: should Sweden demand accountability from the state founded by the group that killed its diplomat? Response deadline is April 30, 2026. [HD10435, frs 2025/26:435, confidence: HIGH]
Internationellt arbete för hbtqi-personers mänskliga rättigheter
Filed by: Anna Lasses (C)
Published:
Interpellation 2025/26:431 Internationellt arbete för hbtqi-personers mänskliga rättigheter av Anna Lasses (C) till Bistånds- och utrikeshandelsminister Benjamin Dousa (M) Hbtqi-personers rättigheter är under hårt tryck i många delar av världen, och organisationer som försvarar mänskliga rättigheter möter allt större
Why It Matters: Anna Lasses (C) challenges Aid Minister Benjamin Dousa (M) on whether Sweden's development assistance uses LGBTQI+ rights conditionality as global regression accelerates. With rights organizations facing increasingly hostile environments in multiple regions, Sweden's bilateral aid policies face scrutiny over whether development money flows to governments actively harming LGBTQI+ citizens. [HD10431, frs 2025/26:431, confidence: MEDIUM]
Skyddet för yttrandefriheten i förhållande till proposition 2025/26:133
Filed by: Rashid Farivar (SD)
Published:
Interpellation 2025/26:429 Skyddet för yttrandefriheten i förhållande till proposition 2025/26:133 av Rashid Farivar (SD) till Justitieminister Gunnar Strömmer (M) Sverige har en stolt och i många avseenden unik tradition av att värna det fria ordet. Redan 1766 fick vi världens första grundlagsskyddade tryckfrihet.
Why It Matters: Rashid Farivar (SD) invokes Sweden's 1766 constitutional press freedom tradition to challenge whether bill 2025/26:133 — which Justice Minister Strömmer has championed — creates tensions with constitutional free speech protections. This is an unusual case of SD challenging a government bill backed by its own coalition support partner, creating intra-coalition complexity. [HD10429, frs 2025/26:429, confidence: MEDIUM]
Moskéer som sprider hat och hot
Filed by: Richard Jomshof (SD)
Published:
Interpellation 2025/26:430 Moskéer som sprider hat och hot av Richard Jomshof (SD) till Socialminister Jakob Forssmed (KD) I skånska Kristianstad finns det i dagsläget två etablerade sunnimuslimska moskéer. I höstas kunde tidningen Expressen avslöja att en av imamerna på en av dessa moskéer bland annat hade predikat
Why It Matters: Richard Jomshof (SD) cites an Expressen investigation exposing hate preaching at a Sunni mosque in Kristianstad and demands Social Minister Jakob Forssmed (KD) explain what state action is available. This case illustrates media-parliament feedback loops: investigative journalism triggers parliamentary accountability demands. SD is pressing KD — a Christian democratic partner — on religious extremism, creating coalition sensitivity. [HD10430, frs 2025/26:430, confidence: HIGH]
education policy (1)
Utbildningen för företagsläkare
Filed by: Johanna Haraldsson (S)
Published:
Interpellation 2025/26:440 Utbildningen för företagsläkare av Johanna Haraldsson (S) till Arbetsmarknadsminister och vikarierande klimat- och miljöminister Johan Britz (L) Kompetensförsörjningen av företagsläkare har under lång tid varit ett växande problem. Sedan Arbetslivsinstitutet avvecklades 2007 har ingen myndighet
Why It Matters: Sweden faces an acute occupational physician shortage with no ministry accepting responsibility. Since Arbetslivsinstitutet closed in 2007, training in occupational medicine has had no responsible authority. The government's own 2024 commission report recommended a solution — but then the commissioning agency was itself abolished without implementing the recommendation, and Karolinska Institutet explicitly refused to take on the mandate. The majority of current company doctors are over 65, with no replacement pipeline. Mandatory medical checks for workers in hazardous environments (asbestos, lead, chemicals, night work) face implementation failure. Johanna Haraldsson (S) has cornered Labor Minister Britz: the ball has been passed between three ministries with no resolution. [HD10440, frs 2025/26:440, confidence: HIGH]
healthcare policy (2)
Uttalanden om ätstörningsvården i Region Stockholm
Filed by: Markus Kallifatides (S)
Published:
Interpellation 2025/26:442 Uttalanden om ätstörningsvården i Region Stockholm av Markus Kallifatides (S) till Finansminister Elisabeth Svantesson (M) Finansminister Elisabeth Svantesson (M) och andra företrädare för Moderaterna har vid upprepade tillfällen under 2025 talat om ätstörningsvården i Region Stockholm och
Why It Matters: Finance Minister Elisabeth Svantesson (M) declared in the Riksdag on September 22, 2025 that Stockholm Region was "closing eating disorder clinics" due to poor fiscal management. A Stockholm Tingsrätt court ruling on April 1, 2026 exposes this claim as factually untenable: Region Stockholm won its case against the private company, which must repay 67 million SEK; the region's reorganization at Stockholms centrum för ätstörningar improved treatment access from 38% (2022, when M ran the region) to 94% (2025). Markus Kallifatides (S) now asks Svantesson to maintain or retract her statement — a perfect parliamentary accountability trap with no good exit. [HD10442, frs 2025/26:442, confidence: VERY HIGH]
Statligt säkerställande av investeringar i vårdbyggnader
Filed by: Robert Olesen (S)
Published:
Interpellation 2025/26:432 Statligt säkerställande av investeringar i vårdbyggnader av Robert Olesen (S) till Sjukvårdsminister Elisabet Lann (KD) Svensk hälso- och sjukvård står inför omfattande investeringsbehov. Runt om i landet behöver sjukhus byggas om, byggas ut eller ersättas. Många vårdbyggnader är från 60-talet
Why It Matters: Sweden's hospital infrastructure is in crisis: many facilities date from the 1960s and urgently need rebuilding or replacement. Robert Olesen (S) presses Health Minister Elisabet Lann (KD) on whether the state will guarantee investment capacity for regional health authorities facing simultaneously deteriorating buildings and constrained budgets. Without state backing, healthcare regions must choose between hospital construction debt and operational spending — a structural crisis that will define healthcare access for decades. Risk score L×I = 19.2 in today's analysis (HIGH). [HD10432, frs 2025/26:432, confidence: HIGH]
justice policy (1)
Brist på poliser i Stockholm
Filed by: Mattias Vepsä (S)
Published:
Interpellation 2025/26:439 Brist på poliser i Stockholm av Mattias Vepsä (S) till Justitieminister Gunnar Strömmer (M) I slutet av mars publicerade Brottsförebyggande rådet (BRÅ) sin utvärdering av polismålet om 10 000 nya poliser. Att målet har uppnåtts och att antalet polisanställda ökar är positivt. Nästa steg måste
Why It Matters: The government's own commissioned BRÅ evaluation (March 2026) confirms the 10,000-police milestone was reached nationally — but simultaneously reveals that Stockholm, with 25% of Sweden's population and the highest crime burden, is the ONLY police region where officer density is declining relative to population growth, with approximately 1,000 officers below parity with peer regions. Mattias Vepsä (S) weaponizes the government's own success narrative against it: the milestone is met on paper, but Sweden's capital city is policed less intensively than before the expansion. Response deadline is April 30, 2026. [HD10439, frs 2025/26:439, confidence: HIGH]
housing policy (1)
Bostadsbyggandet i Stockholmsregionen
Filed by: Leif Nysmed (S)
Published:
Interpellation 2025/26:434 Bostadsbyggandet i Stockholmsregionen av Leif Nysmed (S) till Infrastruktur- och bostadsminister Andreas Carlson (KD) Kommunernas prognos i Stockholms län visar att bostadsbyggandet minskar något under 2026. Totalt beräknas 11 091 bostäder påbörjas, vilket är cirka 900 färre än under 2025.
Why It Matters: Stockholm region municipalities forecast 11,091 housing starts in 2026 — approximately 900 fewer than in 2025. Against a backdrop of housing shortage and rising rents, every decline in construction starts worsens long-term affordability. Leif Nysmed (S) presses Infrastructure Minister Andreas Carlson (KD) — who now faces 9 cumulative interpellations in this session — to explain what tools he has to stimulate construction and whether the housing crisis is being allowed to worsen as an election approaches. Response deadline is April 29, 2026. [HD10434, frs 2025/26:434, confidence: HIGH]
fiscal policy (1)
En bred skatteöversyn
Filed by: Ida Ekeroth Clausson (S)
Published:
Interpellation 2025/26:433 En bred skatteöversyn av Ida Ekeroth Clausson (S) till Finansminister Elisabeth Svantesson (M) Sverige står inför en växande diskussion om skattesystemets legitimitet, effektivitet och fördelningsprofil. Samtidigt som vi beskattar arbetsinkomster relativt högt finns det betydande skillnader
Why It Matters: Ida Ekeroth Clausson (S) presses Finance Minister Elisabeth Svantesson (M) on whether Sweden's tax system — which taxes earned income at relatively high rates while leaving capital income comparatively light — needs a comprehensive review for the first time in decades. With Sweden's fiscal legitimacy debates intensifying pre-election, this interpellation forces Svantesson to defend either the status quo or admit a review is needed, either of which feeds opposition messaging. Response deadline is April 29, 2026. [HD10433, frs 2025/26:433, confidence: HIGH]
defence and security policy (1)
Beredskapsflygplats Scandinavian Mountain Airport
Filed by: Peter Hultqvist (S)
Published:
Interpellation 2025/26:428 Beredskapsflygplats Scandinavian Mountain Airport av Peter Hultqvist (S) till Infrastruktur- och bostadsminister Andreas Carlson (KD) Trafikverket har inte förordat flygplatsen i Malung-Sälen som beredskapsflygplats. Detta trots att Malung-Sälenområdet präglas av en stark och omfattande turism.
Why It Matters: Former Defense Minister Peter Hultqvist (S) challenges Infrastructure Minister Andreas Carlson (KD) on Trafikverket's decision not to designate Scandinavian Mountain Airport (Malung-Sälen) as an emergency airstrip — despite the area's tourism significance and the growing defense need for civilian airport backup capacity. With Sweden having recently joined NATO, questions of total defense infrastructure resonate beyond regional transport policy. [HD10428, frs 2025/26:428, confidence: MEDIUM]
Deep Analysis
Key Actors
S (10), - (2), SD (2), C (1)
What Happened
healthcare policy (2), education policy (1), trade and industry policy (1), justice policy (1), housing policy (1), fiscal policy (1)
ip: 15
Timeline & Context
Fifteen interpellations are active in the 2025/26 riksmöte during the week of April 21, 2026 — a concentrated burst arriving as the Riksdag spring session approaches its final six weeks. The timing is not coincidental: with elections scheduled for September 2026, opposition parties are racing to build a documented accountability record before parliament rises. Three new interpellations filed today (HD10440, HD10441, HD10442) cluster response deadlines in the April 29 — May 5 window, exactly the period of the Riksdag's final substantive plenary weeks before summer recess. HD10442 on Finance Minister Svantesson is exceptional: backed by a court judgment rendered April 1, 2026, it forces the minister to respond to verifiably documented parliamentary misinformation. The calendar pressure is asymmetric — ministers must respond formally within 4 weeks (Riksdagsordningen), meaning every interpellation filed today generates a mandatory accountability moment in May, precisely when campaign positioning hardens.
Why This Matters
Seven policy domains are active simultaneously — but this breadth conceals a strategic pattern: Socialdemokraterna (S) is conducting a coordinated pre-election documentation campaign, with 10 of 15 interpellations from S members targeting five distinct coalition ministers. The key domains reveal S's electoral priorities: healthcare (HD10442 Svantesson false statements, HD10432 hospital infrastructure) targets Sweden's most electorally salient policy area; education (HD10440 occupational physicians) targets workers' rights voters; housing (HD10434 Stockholm) targets urban millennials; fiscal policy (HD10433 tax reform) targets economic fairness voters; justice (HD10439 Stockholm police) targets voters who accepted the government's 10,000 police promise. This is not scatter-shot opposition — it is a coordinated vulnerability map of the Tidö coalition's most exposed policy flanks, filed with precision timing to force public ministerial responses during maximum election campaign visibility. The EU Pay Transparency Directive (HD10437) adds a compliance-failure dimension: Sweden faces external accountability from Brussels, not just domestic opposition challenge.
Winners & Losers
Winners: Socialdemokraterna emerge as the clear strategic beneficiary — their coordinated campaign of 10 interpellations creates a permanent parliamentary record of coalition failures across healthcare, housing, justice, and fiscal policy that will fuel campaign advertising in autumn 2026. Markus Kallifatides (S) achieves the session's highest-significance intervention: HD10442 uses a court judgment to trap Finance Minister Svantesson in an epistemological bind — either she admits her September 2025 Riksdag statement was false, or she doubles down against documentary evidence. The independent MP Elsa Widding (HD10441) gains credibility by targeting a constitutional principle rather than a partisan point. Losers: Finance Minister Elisabeth Svantesson (M) faces the most acute exposure: she is targeted by both HD10442 (documented false statement) and HD10433 (tax reform demand), giving S two attack vectors simultaneously. Infrastructure Minister Andreas Carlson (KD) has now accumulated 9 interpellations this session — the highest ministerial count — signalling that S has identified housing policy as a KD-owned failure. Gender Equality Minister Nina Larsson (L) faces a two-front challenge from the same opposition MP on the same day (HD10437 + HD10438), a deliberately coordinated narrative of liberal-feminist policy failure. Justice Minister Gunnar Strömmer (M) faces both S (HD10439 Stockholm police) and an independent (HD10441 legal certainty) plus SD (HD10429 freedom of expression), suggesting cross-partisan accountability pressure.
Political Impact
Interpellations do not result in votes — their political impact operates through two mechanisms: (1) the ministerial record created by mandatory written and oral responses, and (2) media visibility during chamber debates. The political impact of today's batch is disproportionately weighted toward HD10442: a Finance Minister admitting or defending false parliamentary statements would be a first-term scandal that could shift the political debate from policy to character and competence. For the coalition, the arithmetic is difficult: four ministers targeted this week are from four different parties (Svantesson/M, Larsson/L, Carlson/KD, Britz/L), meaning each ministerial response strategy operates in its own party's electoral interest, potentially creating coalition messaging tension. The 2025/26 riksmöte has now seen 442 interpellations — a high-pace session suggesting that the opposition views parliamentary scrutiny tools as primary electoral weapons rather than conventional oversight instruments. S's 10/15 interpellation share represents systematic strategic deployment, not reactive opposition.
Actions & Consequences
Immediate timeline: HD10435 (Folke Bernadotte/Israel, resp. deadline April 30) and HD10439 (Stockholm police deficit, deadline April 30) are the first to require ministerial responses. HD10428 (emergency airport), HD10433 (tax reform), HD10434 (housing starts) follow on April 29-30. The bulk of new interpellations — HD10437 (Pay Transparency Directive), HD10438 (women's shelters), HD10440 (occupational physicians), HD10441 (legal certainty), HD10442 (Svantesson false statements) — have May 4-5 response deadlines. Structural consequences: If HD10437 fails to produce legislative action, Sweden risks EU infringement proceedings after June 7, 2026 — a tangible external consequence beyond political debate. HD10442 creates a specific documentation risk for Svantesson: any response becomes part of the formal parliamentary record and can be cited in campaign materials. The occupational physician crisis (HD10440) will likely produce a ministerial referral to yet another commission, perpetuating the accountability vacuum since 2007. Election framing: By May, the S opposition will have generated 442 interpellations in a single session — an unprecedented documentation record. Expect S campaign materials in autumn 2026 to cite specific ministerial responses (or non-responses) from this period as evidence of Tidö coalition governance failures.
Critical Assessment
The interpellation record for 2025/26 reveals a structural asymmetry in parliamentary discourse: S submits 10 of 15 active interpellations, but the session total of 442 across all parties demonstrates that the interpellation mechanism has become the opposition's primary public accountability tool — superseding written questions in media salience and legislative motions in political impact. The discourse is notable for its evidential quality: HD10442 cites a specific court judgment date and judgment outcome; HD10440 cites the specific commission report and its non-implementation; HD10439 cites the specific BRÅ evaluation. This is a departure from interpellations that assert policy failures without documentation — today's batch presents ministers with documented evidence rather than political claims, making deflection significantly harder. The non-partisan dimension is strategically significant: Widding (independent) on legal certainty and Farivar (SD) on freedom of expression challenge Justice Minister Strömmer from multiple ideological directions, preventing him from dismissing scrutiny as "typical opposition." Coalition parties' own members have filed no interpellations against government ministers in this batch — suggesting that internal coalition discipline is holding, but that external pressure is intensifying as elections approach.
Multiple Perspectives
S (10): healthcare policy, education policy · - (2) · SD (2) · C (1)
Coalition Dynamics
- -: 2 interpellations filed
- S: 10 interpellations filed
- C: 1 interpellation filed
- SD: 2 interpellations filed
Economic Context
Sweden's economy grew by just 0.82% in 2024 after a contraction of 0.2% in 2023, providing economic context for opposition interpellations demanding broader fiscal reform (frs 2025/26:433). Unemployment rose to 8.7% in 2025, up from 6.8% in 2019, directly pressuring the government's labor market and integration policy — the subject of multiple interpellations targeting both Finance Minister Svantesson and Labour Minister Britz (frs 2025/26:422). Against this backdrop of sluggish economic recovery and rising joblessness, opposition demands for EU Pay Transparency Directive transposition (frs 2025/26:437) and tax system reform carry heightened urgency as Sweden heads into the September 2026 election.
| Country | Unemployment Rate | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| Sweden | 8.69 | % of labor force |
| Country | GDP Growth | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| Sweden | 0.82 | % annual |
SWOT Analysis
Swedish Parliament
Strengths
- Court-documented accountability leverage — Stockholm Tingsrätt judgment (2026-04-01) provides external, non-partisan validation; eating-disorder-care access 38%→94%. Docs: HD10442. Confidence: VERY HIGH.
- Coordinated opposition strategy — S filed 11/14 recent interpellations; twin attack HD10437+HD10438 on Larsson same day. Docs: HD10437, HD10438. Confidence: HIGH.
- Authoritative non-partisan evidence — BRÅ report provides quotable data on Stockholm police deficit. Docs: HD10439. Confidence: HIGH.
- EU legal leverage — Pay Transparency Directive infringement deadline June 7, 2026 is externally enforced. Docs: HD10437. Confidence: HIGH.
- Interpellation procedure as democratic tool — RF Ch. 13 creates robust parliamentary accountability record. Docs: Procedural. Confidence: HIGH.
Weaknesses
- Svantesson false-statement exposure — Court ruling contradicts 2025-09-22 Riksdag claim; no viable defence without retraction. Docs: HD10442. Confidence: VERY HIGH.
- Carlson portfolio overload — 9+ cumulative interpellations across housing/infrastructure; accountability burden unsustainable. Docs: HD10428, HD10434. Confidence: HIGH.
- Larsson unanswered twin attack — HD10437 + HD10438 both pending within May 5 deadline. Docs: HD10437, HD10438. Confidence: HIGH.
- Occupational-medicine institutional vacuum — No responsible authority since Arbetslivsinstitutet closed 2007; 2024 recommendation unimplemented. Docs: HD10440. Confidence: HIGH.
- Stockholm police density declining — Only region where density falls despite 10,000-officer milestone; ~1,000 officers short. Docs: HD10439. Confidence: HIGH.
Opportunities
- Pre-election accountability record — Interpellation responses create campaign-ready quotes 5 months before election. Docs: All 17. Confidence: HIGH.
- Cross-party tax-review consensus — LO + SACO + Svenskt Näringsliv aligned; 1990-reform analogue. Docs: HD10433. Confidence: HIGH.
- Stockholm housing-construction critique — 11,091 starts vs 20,000+ need frames coalition competence. Docs: HD10434. Confidence: HIGH.
- International-law alignment — Bernadotte (HD10435) + Israel death penalty (HD10426) reinforce Swedish rights tradition. Docs: HD10435, HD10426. Confidence: MEDIUM.
- DO discrimination test case — Police Authority lawsuit (HD10420) advances discrimination enforcement precedent. Docs: HD10420. Confidence: HIGH.
Threats
- EU infringement proceedings — L×I 22.5; 47-day window before Pay Directive deadline. Docs: HD10437. Confidence: HIGH.
- Finance Minister court-documented misstatement — L×I 23.0; no defensible response path. Docs: HD10442. Confidence: VERY HIGH.
- Women's shelter closures election-year optics — L×I 21.6; domestic-violence infrastructure crisis. Docs: HD10438. Confidence: HIGH.
- Intra-coalition fault lines — SD HD10429 on prop 2025/26:133 + HD10430 on mosques force KD/M public positioning. Docs: HD10429, HD10430. Confidence: MEDIUM.
- Bernadotte diplomatic fallout — Israel response risk to foreign-policy stance. Docs: HD10435. Confidence: MEDIUM.
Risk & Threat Assessment
# Risk Assessment — Interpellations 2026-04-21 **Date**: 2026-04-21 | **Framework**: ISO 31000 + ISMS | **Analyst**: news-interpellation-debates | **Source**: interpellations-risk-assessment
Democratic Health: MEDIUM