Opposition motions

Social Democrats Challenge Government's Anti-Corruption Overreach

The Social Democrats (S) have filed Motion 2025/26:4099 (HD024099) rejecting the government's flagship anti-corruption proposition (prop. 2025/26:217), arguing the new crime "missbruk av offentlig…

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Executive Brief


🎯 BLUF

The Social Democrats (S) have filed Motion 2025/26:4099 (HD024099) rejecting the government's flagship anti-corruption proposition (prop. 2025/26:217), arguing the new crime "missbruk av offentlig ställning" will not protect public trust and risks chilling legitimate civil servant discretion. S proposes either full rejection of the new offense or, if passed, a "compelling social interest" exemption; simultaneously demanding government return with broader corruption reforms from the parliamentary Corruption Investigation Committee. This is a direct challenge to Justice Minister Strömmer's (M) signature legislative achievement and signals that S will make criminal justice accountability a central theme in the 2026 election campaign.

🧭 Decisions This Brief Supports

  1. Editorial decision: Whether to frame this as S opposing accountability reform vs. S demanding more comprehensive reform — the evidence strongly supports the latter; S's demand for broader Chapter 10 BrB reform is genuine.
  2. Legislative tracking decision: JuU will process this motion against prop. 2025/26:217; the committee's recommendation (bifalla/avslå) expected by late May 2026 — monitor for SD party position as pivotal vote.
  3. Election 2026 assessment: Should criminal justice accountability be elevated as a key S campaign issue? Yes — Teresa Carvalho's filing positions S as the party defending civil servants from criminalization overreach while demanding systemic anti-corruption reform.

⚡ 60-Second Read

  • What happened: S filed Kommittémotion HD024099 on 2026-04-27 against prop. 2025/26:217 [A2]
  • The government proposal: New criminal offenses "missbruk av offentlig ställning" (misuse of public position) and "grovt missbruk" in Brottsbalken; effective 1 August 2026 [A1]
  • S's core objection: The new crime "träffar fel" (misses the target) — will not achieve its stated goal and risks chilling civil servant decision-making [B2]
  • S's three demands: (1) Reject the new offense entirely; (2) if passed, add social-interest valve; (3) return with broader corruption reform [A2]
  • Political stakes: Pre-election positioning on rule of law; tests governing coalition cohesion; SD pivotal [C2]
  • Key forward trigger: JuU committee vote, expected 2026 May/June; vote timing may collide with summer budget deliberations [B2]

🔺 Top Forward Trigger

JuU committee deliberation on prop. 2025/26:217: Expected May–June 2026. If SD breaks with governing coalition on the "chilling effect" concern — possible given SD's electorate of lower-income public-sector workers — the proposition could be amended or delayed, delivering S a partial legislative victory before the 2026 election.

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flowchart LR
    A["📄 HD024099\nS Motion 2026-04-27"] --> B{"JuU\nCommittee"}
    B -->|"Avslå motion\n(governing majority)"| C["Prop. 2025/26:217\npasses as proposed"]
    B -->|"Bifalla §2\n(valve amendment)"| D["Amended proposition\nwith social-interest exemption"]
    B -->|"SD defects\n(chilling-effect concern)"| E["Proposition delayed\nor substantially amended"]
    C --> F["Criminal Law\nAug 1, 2026"]
    D --> G["Modified Law\nAug 1, 2026"]
    E --> H["Election issue\nOct 2026"]
    style A fill:#00d9ff,color:#0a0e27
    style B fill:#ff006e,color:#fff
    style C fill:#ffbe0b,color:#0a0e27
    style D fill:#00d9ff,color:#0a0e27
    style E fill:#ff006e,color:#fff
    style F fill:#1a1e3d,color:#e0e0e0
    style G fill:#1a1e3d,color:#e0e0e0
    style H fill:#ff006e,color:#fff

Reader Intelligence Guide

Use this guide to read the article as a political-intelligence product rather than a raw artifact dump. High-value reader lenses appear first; technical provenance remains available in the audit appendix.

Reader needWhat you'll getSource artifact
BLUF and editorial decisionsfast answer to what happened, why it matters, who is accountable, and the next dated triggerexecutive-brief.md
Key Judgmentsconfidence-bearing political-intelligence conclusions and collection gapsintelligence-assessment.md
Significance scoringwhy this story outranks or trails other same-day parliamentary signalssignificance-scoring.md
Media framinglikely narrative frames, amplifiers, counter-frames, and manipulation risksmedia-framing-analysis.md
Forward indicatorsdated watch items that let readers verify or falsify the assessment laterforward-indicators.md
Scenariosalternative outcomes with probabilities, triggers, and warning signsscenario-analysis.md
Risk assessmentpolicy, electoral, institutional, communications, and implementation risk registerrisk-assessment.md
Per-document intelligencedok_id-level evidence, named actors, dates, and primary-source traceabilitydocuments/*-analysis.md
Audit appendixclassification, cross-reference, methodology and manifest evidence for reviewersappendix artifacts

Synthesis Summary

Lead Story Decision

The critical decision point is whether the Social Democrats' opposition to prop. 2025/26:217 represents a principled rule-of-law position or pre-election posturing — analysis of HD024099 reveals both dimensions are present, with the principled legal argument (chilling effect on civil servants, wrong instrument for the problem) substantively stronger than the electoral positioning framing favoured by government defenders.

DIW-Weighted Intelligence Ranking

DocumentDIW WeightTierSignificance
HD024099 (S mot. re prop. 2025/26:217)8.2/10L2+ PrioritySingle highest-impact motion filed 2026-04-27; touches criminal justice reform, rule of law, civil service accountability, 2026 electoral dynamics

Ranking rationale (HD024099):

  • Depth: L2+ — involves constitutional criminal law, BrB amendment, impacts 1.2 million public sector workers [riksdagen.se/HD024099]
  • Influence: High — potential SD defection from governing coalition; pre-election judicial accountability framing
  • Wedge potential: HIGH — S exploits tension between government's anti-corruption rhetoric and civil servants' (SD electorate) fear of criminalisation

Integrated Intelligence Picture

Motion HD024099 is a counter-narrative document in the criminal justice reform debate. The governing coalition (M/KD/L/C with SD) tabled prop. 2025/26:217 to create new criminal offenses for public officials who "misuse their public position" — a direct response to municipal contract manipulation and institutional lawfare cases. Justice Minister Gunnar Strömmer (M) has presented this as essential for preserving public trust [HD03217].

S counters on three fronts:

  1. Instrumentally: The proposed offense "missbruk av offentlig ställning" sets a too-low intent threshold — civil servants face criminal risk for ordinary errors in judgment, not just corrupt self-dealing. S cites the risk of chilling administrative discretion [HD024099, B2].

  2. Comprehensively: The government cherry-picked the easiest element of the Corruption Investigation Committee's recommendations while leaving the substantive Chapter 10 BrB reforms (aimed at high-level corruption) off the table [HD024099, C3].

  3. Procedurally: S demands a social-interest exemption clause as a minimum safeguard if the offense is passed anyway [HD024099, A2].

The intelligence picture is that this motion strengthens S's accountability credentials ahead of the 2026 election while exposing a potential crack in the Tidö coalition — SD's working-class municipal employees are precisely the workers most exposed to the new criminal risk.

Cross-Document Synthesis

No additional motions filed on 2026-04-28. Lookback to 2026-04-27 yields HD024099 as the sole qualifying document. Context motions from April 16-17 (HD024092, HD024094, HD024096, HD024098 — on fuel tax, defence exports, municipal healthcare) are not in scope for this run but represent consistent opposition-party counter-budgeting and regulatory challenge activity in the same riksmöte.

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mindmap
  root(("🏛️ Motion\nHD024099"))
    ("⚖️ Criminal Law Reform\nprop 2025/26:217")
      ("New offense:\nmissbruk av\noffentlig ställning")
      ("Grovt missbruk:\n6 year max sentence")
      ("Effective: 1 Aug 2026")
    ("🔴 S Opposition")
      ("Teresa Carvalho\nm.fl. S")
      ("Reject new offense")
      ("Social-interest valve\nif passed")
      ("Demand broader\ncorruption reform")
    ("⚡ Political Stakes")
      ("2026 Election\naccountability framing")
      ("SD pivotal vote\nin JuU")
      ("Civil servant\nprotection narrative")
    ("🌐 International Context")
      ("UNCAC compliance")
      ("EU anti-corruption\ndirective alignment")
      ("Nordic peer\ncomparison")
  style root fill:#00d9ff,color:#0a0e27

Intelligence Assessment — Key Judgments

Standards: ICD 203 (Analytic Standards), ICD 206 (Sourcing)

Summary

This assessment addresses the parliamentary implications of Motion HD024099 (S) and its relationship to prop. 2025/26:217 on expanded criminal liability for public officials. Three Key Judgments are issued, each with confidence calibration per ICD 203.


Key Judgment 1 (KJ-1)

We assess with HIGH CONFIDENCE that prop. 2025/26:217 will pass the Riksdag with the governing coalition intact.

Rationale: The governing coalition (M-KD-L + SD) has maintained discipline on criminal law legislation in riksmöte 2025/26. SD's last significant deviation from coalition positions on justice policy was in 2023 (opposition to certain rehabilitation provisions, not criminal liability expansion). The proposition aligns with SD's law-and-order profile. No public dissent from coalition members has been identified as of 2026-04-27.

Evidence Base: riksdagen.se voting records for JuU 2024/25 and 2025/26; HD024099 (S motion); HD03217 (prop. background).

Dissent: Scenario 2 (28% probability) represents minority-confidence path where C or L accept S's §2 social-interest valve. This does not overturn KJ-1 (prop. passes) but would modify the final enacted text.


Key Judgment 2 (KJ-2)

We assess with MEDIUM CONFIDENCE that the "missbruk av offentlig ställning" offense will have a documented chilling effect on municipal civil servant decision-making within 12-18 months of enactment.

Rationale: The comparative evidence from Norway (Straffeloven §172, 2005) and the structure of the proposed Swedish offense (lower intent threshold than Norwegian comparator) support this assessment. SKR and LO/TCO have both raised concerns per the remiss process (HD03217 background). The legal threshold "i strid med lag eller annan författning" is broader than equivalent Scandinavian provisions.

Evidence Base: comparative-international.md (Norway §172 analysis); stakeholder-perspectives.md (SKR/LO analysis); risk-assessment.md (Risk 2: Chilling effect, L=3 × I=4).

Key Uncertainty: Prosecutorial discretion policy by Åklagarmyndigheten. If prosecutors apply high de minimis threshold, chilling effect may not materialise at predicted scale.


Key Judgment 3 (KJ-3)

We assess with MEDIUM-HIGH CONFIDENCE that Chapter 10 BrB comprehensive reform will be deferred to the next mandate period (post-2026 election) regardless of how prop. 2025/26:217 is processed.

Rationale: The government's active legislative calendar for spring 2026 leaves insufficient time to commission, conduct, and present a Chapter 10 BrB reform before the September 2026 election. Even if S's §3 demand is acknowledged by JuU, any commission would not report before election. This makes S's §3 demand strategically valuable as an election platform commitment rather than a near-term legislative achievement.

Evidence Base: scenario-analysis.md (Scenario 3, 12%); riksdag.se legislative calendar data; historical analysis of Swedish criminal law reform timelines.


PIR Status Summary

PIRTopicKJConfidence
PIR-1Coalition stability on prop. 2025/26:217KJ-1HIGH [A2]
PIR-2Chilling-effect risk post-enactmentKJ-2MEDIUM [B3]
PIR-3Chapter 10 BrB reform timelineKJ-3MEDIUM-HIGH [B2]

Collection Gaps

  • No access to non-public remiss responses (Lagrådet opinions classified as non-public until tabling)
  • No access to coalition negotiations; only public statements available
  • SD internal position on municipal-worker chilling effect not yet publicly stated
%%{init: {'theme': 'dark', 'themeVariables': {'primaryColor': '#00d9ff', 'secondaryColor': '#ff006e', 'background': '#0a0e27'}}}%%
graph TD
    KJ1["KJ-1: Prop passes<br/>HIGH CONFIDENCE"] --> |"governs timing"| KJ3
    KJ1 --> |"triggers"| KJ2
    KJ2["KJ-2: Chilling effect<br/>MEDIUM CONFIDENCE"] --> |"if no valve"| RISK["Municipal sector risk<br/>escalation"]
    KJ3["KJ-3: Ch10 deferred<br/>MEDIUM-HIGH CONFIDENCE"] --> ELEC["2026 election<br/>accountability platform"]
    style KJ1 fill:#00d9ff,color:#000
    style KJ2 fill:#ffbe0b,color:#000
    style KJ3 fill:#00d9ff,color:#000
    style RISK fill:#ff006e,color:#fff
    style ELEC fill:#1a1e3d,color:#e0e0e0

Significance Scoring

DIW Scores

Rankdok_idD (1-10)I (1-10)W (1-10)DIWPriority Tier
1HD024099888.58.17L2+ Priority

Scoring Rationale

1. HD024099 — Motion 2025/26:4099 (S) re prop. 2025/26:217 [DIW: 8.17]

Depth (8/10): Kommittémotion with three distinct parliamentary demands; engages BrB criminal law amendment (Chapter 20, new §1a), constitutional proportionality principles, and the full Committee on Corruption reform agenda. Impacts ~1.2 million Swedish public-sector employees and elected officials at municipal/regional/national level.

Influence (8/10): Filed in JuU by Teresa Carvalho, S shadow justice spokesperson — carries party-line weight. The motion directly determines whether prop. 2025/26:217 passes intact, is amended with the valve, or is delayed. SD's position is decisive: if SD joins S on the chilling-effect argument, the governing coalition must negotiate.

Wedge (8.5/10): Exceptionally high wedge potential. The governing coalition is promoting "tougher accountability" as a flagship law-and-order message; S is countering with "civil servant protection + comprehensive reform." SD's base (municipal workers, police, care workers) is exactly the group most exposed to the new criminal risk. This creates a natural SD-voter constituency pressure on SD Riksdag members.

Sensitivity analysis: DIW could fall to 7.2 if SD publicly commits to supporting prop. 2025/26:217 unchanged. DIW rises to 9.0 if JuU requests additional inquiry following S's demand for Chapter 10 BrB reform.

Priority Tiers

  • L3 Intelligence-grade: DIW ≥ 9.0 — Not reached in this cycle
  • L2+ Priority: DIW 7.5–8.9 — HD024099
  • L2 Strategic: DIW 5.0–7.4 — No additional documents in scope
  • L1 Surface: DIW < 5.0 — Not applicable
%%{init: {'theme': 'dark', 'themeVariables': {'primaryColor': '#00d9ff', 'secondaryColor': '#ff006e', 'background': '#0a0e27'}}}%%
xychart-beta
    title "DIW Significance Scoring — Motions 2026-04-28"
    x-axis ["HD024099 (S/JuU)"]
    y-axis "Score (0-10)" 0 --> 10
    bar [8.17]
    line [7.5]

Media Framing Analysis

Framing Overview

Motion HD024099 offers sharply different framing opportunities for different political actors. The underlying policy question (criminal accountability vs. civil servant protection) maps onto pre-existing partisan frames.

Per-Party Framing

S (Socialdemokraterna) — "Proportionate Accountability"

Core frame: The government's proposition is blunt, disproportionate, and will create chilling effects for civil servants doing their jobs in good faith. We filed HD024099 to protect workers and demand genuine anti-corruption reform.

Key messages:

  • "1.2 miljoner offentliganställda riskerar åtal"
  • "Strömmer väljer symbolpolitik framför verklig korruptionsbekämpning"
  • "Vi kräver en samlad reform av kapitel 10 BrB"

Target audience: Municipal workers (LO/TCO), accountability-minded urban voters

Electoral payoff: HIGH for Segment A (civil servants); medium for Segment B

M/Strömmer — "Accountability Works"

Core frame: The current tjänstefel law has a critical gap — officials who exploit their position outside myndighetsutövning escape criminal liability. This proposition closes that gap.

Key messages:

  • "Offentliga tjänstemän ska hålla sig inom lagen"
  • "Missbruk av offentlig ställning — nu straffbart"
  • "S vill skydda sina väljare, inte allmänheten"

Target audience: Law-and-order voters, urban taxpayers concerned about municipal corruption

SD — "Law and Order, With Common Sense"

Core frame: SD supports the proposition but will monitor implementation to ensure that good-faith civil servants are not prosecuted for minor errors.

Key message (expected): "Vi följer att åklagarmyndigheten tillämpar detta proportionellt"

Internal tension: Municipal-worker SD voters (Segment C) creates quiet pressure for SD to support Scenario 2 (valve) without public acknowledgement.

C/L — "Proportionate Criminal Law"

Core frame (potential Scenario 2 trigger): C and L have historically emphasised proportionality in criminal law. If they adopt this frame, they can justify supporting the social-interest valve (HD024099 §2) as consistent with their traditional rule-of-law profile.

Expected message: "Vi stödjer propositionen men välkomnar en proportionalitetsventil"

V/MP — "Anti-Corruption Must Be Comprehensive"

Core frame: V and MP will reinforce S's §3 demand — comprehensive Chapter 10 BrB reform is necessary to genuinely combat corruption rather than criminalise individual mistakes.

Media Framing Matrix

Media outletExpected primary frameLikely headline angle
Dagens NyheterProportionality concern"Kritik: Strömmer-lag kan kriminalisera vardagsfelbeslut"
Svenska DagbladetAccountability frame"Ny lag stärker tjänstemannaansvaret"
AftonbladetWorker protection"Miljoner anställda kan straffas — S larmar"
ExpressenLaw-and-order"Strömmer tar i med hårdhandskarna mot tjänstemissbruk"
SVT NyheterBalanced"Debatt om gränsen för tjänstemannaansvar"
%%{init: {'theme': 'dark', 'themeVariables': {'primaryColor': '#00d9ff', 'secondaryColor': '#ff006e', 'background': '#0a0e27'}}}%%
quadrantChart
    title Media Frames: Accountability vs Protection × Government vs Opposition
    x-axis "Opposition aligned" --> "Government aligned"
    y-axis "Worker protection focus" --> "Accountability focus"
    quadrant-1 Government-Accountability
    quadrant-2 Opposition-Accountability
    quadrant-3 Opposition-Protection
    quadrant-4 Government-Protection
    "Aftonbladet": [0.2, 0.2]
    "Expressen": [0.75, 0.8]
    "SvD": [0.8, 0.7]
    "DN": [0.45, 0.65]
    "SVT": [0.5, 0.5]
    style "Aftonbladet" fill:#ff006e
    style "Expressen" fill:#00d9ff

Stakeholder Perspectives

6-Lens Stakeholder Matrix

StakeholderRolePositionInterestInfluenceAdmiralty
Teresa Carvalho (S)JuU member, shadow justice spokespersonReject new offense; demand broader reform [HD024099]Build S accountability credentials pre-electionHIGH[A2]
Gunnar Strömmer (M)Justice MinisterDefend prop. 2025/26:217; new offense is essential for public trustFlagship legislation successVERY HIGH[A1]
SD (Sverigedemokraterna)Governing coalition support partyLikely support prop.; municipal workers exposedMaintain coalition + protect voter baseHIGH[B3]
KD/L/C (small coalition partners)Governing coalitionSupport prop.; strong accountability positionsCoalition cohesionMEDIUM[B3]
StatskontoretPublic administration watchdogNo public position, but relevant for implementation assessmentGovernance qualityMEDIUM[assessment]
Sveriges Kommuner och Regioner (SKR)Employer body for municipalitiesConcerned about chilling effect on elected councillorsMember protectionHIGH[B2, assessment]
JuU CommitteeParliamentary committeeProcessing both prop. and motion; recommendation pendingLegislative qualityHIGH[A1]
Fackförbund (TCO/Saco/LO)Trade unions for civil servantsStrongly opposed to criminal risk for membersMember protectionMEDIUM[B2, assessment]

Named Actor Influence Network

%%{init: {'theme': 'dark', 'themeVariables': {'primaryColor': '#00d9ff', 'secondaryColor': '#ff006e', 'background': '#0a0e27'}}}%%
flowchart LR
    Strömmer["Gunnar Strömmer (M)\nJustice Minister"] -->|"defends"| Prop["prop. 2025/26:217"]
    Carvalho["Teresa Carvalho (S)\nJuU member"] -->|"challenges"| Prop
    SD["SD Riksdag members\nJuU seats"] -->|"likely supports"| Prop
    SKR["SKR\nMunicipality employers"] -->|"lobbies against"| Prop
    Unions["TCO/LO unions\nCivil servants"] -->|"lobbies against"| Prop
    JuU["JuU Committee\nrecommendation"] -->|"processes"| Riksdag["🏛️ Riksdag vote"]
    Prop --> JuU
    style Strömmer fill:#00d9ff,color:#0a0e27
    style Carvalho fill:#ff006e,color:#fff
    style SD fill:#ffbe0b,color:#0a0e27
    style SKR fill:#1a1e3d,color:#e0e0e0
    style Unions fill:#1a1e3d,color:#e0e0e0
    style JuU fill:#00d9ff,color:#0a0e27
    style Riksdag fill:#ff006e,color:#fff

Party Positions Summary

  • S: Reject new offense (HD024099 §1); social interest valve (§2); Chapter 10 BrB reform (§3) [HD024099, A2]
  • M: Strong support for prop. 2025/26:217 as accountability reform [HD03217, A1]
  • SD: Assessed as governing coalition support; no public dissent as of 2026-04-27 [B3]
  • MP: Filed separate motion (HD024098) on fuel tax — not co-signatory on HD024099 [riksdagen.se]
  • V: Filed separate motion (HD024092) on fuel tax — not co-signatory on HD024099 [riksdagen.se]
  • C: Filed separate motion (HD024094) on healthcare — not co-signatory on HD024099 [riksdagen.se]

Forward Indicators

PIR Coverage: PIR-1, PIR-2, PIR-3

Overview

Forward indicators across four time horizons to track the evolution of the prop. 2025/26:217 / HD024099 legislative trajectory.


Horizon 1: Immediate (7-14 days)

Indicator 1.1 — JuU scheduling announcement
Due by: 2026-05-05
Signal: JuU secretariat publishes agenda for prop. 2025/26:217 hearing. If the hearing includes academic legal experts, signals possible openness to amendment (Scenario 2).
Track at: riksdagen.se/sv/utskott/justitieutskottet/kallelser

Indicator 1.2 — SD JuU member public statement
Due by: 2026-05-05
Signal: Any SD JuU member statement on "missbruk av offentlig ställning" that mentions proportionality or municipal workers signals potential Scenario 2 support.
Track at: SD press releases, riksdagen.se ledamot activity

Indicator 1.3 — C or L statement on proportionality
Due by: 2026-05-01
Signal: C or L public statement referencing chilling effect or proportionality in criminal law → HIGH probability Scenario 2 (social-interest valve amendment).
Track at: Centerpartiet.se, Liberalerna.se, riksdagen.se


Horizon 2: Short-term (2-4 weeks)

Indicator 2.1 — JuU committee vote date confirmed
Due by: 2026-05-15
Signal: JuU vote scheduled for prop. 2025/26:217. If postponed beyond May, may indicate negotiation on valve amendment.
Track at: riksdagen.se utskott kalender

Indicator 2.2 — Åklagarmyndigheten guidance announcement
Due by: 2026-05-20
Signal: If Åklagarmyndigheten proactively publishes guidance on prosecutorial discretion for the new offense BEFORE the JuU vote, signals that the government is addressing chilling-effect concerns without accepting HD024099 §2.
Track at: aklagare.se/nyheter

Indicator 2.3 — SKR public position paper
Due by: 2026-05-15
Signal: SKR (Swedish Association of Local Authorities and Regions) publishing formal guidance to member municipalities on the new offense signals implementation concerns being institutionalised.
Track at: skr.se/aktuellt

Indicator 2.4 — S Riksdag debate request
Due by: 2026-05-10
Signal: If S files a chamber debate request (anmälan om interpellation or ministerial question) specifically on chilling effects, signals S is escalating media pressure on this issue.
Track at: riksdagen.se fragor och interpellationer


Horizon 3: Medium-term (1-2 months)

Indicator 3.1 — Chamber vote date confirmed
Due by: 2026-06-05
Signal: Prop. 2025/26:217 passed by JuU and scheduled for chamber vote. Vote arithmetic will determine if Scenario 1, 2 or 3 materialises.
Track at: riksdagen.se ärendelista

Indicator 3.2 — Government directive on Chapter 10 BrB
Due by: 2026-06-01
Signal: Government publishes a kommittédirektiv commissioning a Chapter 10 BrB review. This would confirm Scenario 3 (12%) materialised.
Track at: regeringen.se kommittédirektiv

Indicator 3.3 — First chilling-effect media report
Due by: 2026-07-01
Signal: Any major Swedish media report (DN, SVT, SR) describing a specific case of a civil servant delaying a decision due to fear of prosecution under the new law.
Track at: Danish-equivalent media monitoring; riksdag press archive

Indicator 3.4 — Employer guidance publication
Due by: 2026-07-15
Signal: If no employer guidance is published before the August 2026 effective date, the chilling-effect risk escalates significantly (Risk 2 in risk-assessment.md).
Track at: arbetsgivarverket.se; skr.se


Horizon 4: Long-term (3-6 months / Election proximity)

Indicator 4.1 — S election platform publication
Due by: 2026-08-15
Signal: If S's 2026 Riksdagsval platform includes a commitment to repeal or comprehensively reform the new offense, confirms that HD024099 has been successfully elevated to electoral issue.
Track at: socialdemokraterna.se

Indicator 4.2 — First prosecution under new law
Due by: 2026-10-31
Signal: Åklagarmyndigheten files first charge under "missbruk av offentlig ställning." If the case involves a municipal social-welfare worker (not a high-level official), vindicates S's chilling-effect concern and becomes major campaign issue.
Track at: aklagare.se pressrum; Brå statistics

Indicator 4.3 — Chapter 10 BrB commission appointment (post-election)
Due by: 2026-12-31
Signal: If the post-September 2026 government (regardless of which bloc forms it) appoints a Chapter 10 BrB reform commission, confirms long-term legislative trajectory consistent with S's §3 demand.
Track at: riksdagen.se; regeringen.se kommittéer


Indicator Dashboard Summary

HorizonIndicatorDue DatePIRStatus
1: ImmediateJuU scheduling2026-05-05PIR-1PENDING
1: ImmediateSD statement2026-05-05PIR-1PENDING
1: ImmediateC/L proportionality2026-05-01PIR-1PENDING
2: Short-termJuU vote date2026-05-15PIR-1PENDING
2: Short-termÅklagarmyndigheten guidance2026-05-20PIR-2PENDING
2: Short-termSKR position paper2026-05-15PIR-2PENDING
2: Short-termS interpellation2026-05-10PIR-1PENDING
3: MediumChamber vote2026-06-05PIR-1PENDING
3: MediumGov. Ch.10 directive2026-06-01PIR-3PENDING
3: MediumFirst media report2026-07-01PIR-2PENDING
3: MediumEmployer guidance2026-07-15PIR-2PENDING
4: LongS election platform2026-08-15PIR-3PENDING
4: LongFirst prosecution2026-10-31PIR-2PENDING
%%{init: {'theme': 'dark', 'themeVariables': {'primaryColor': '#00d9ff', 'secondaryColor': '#ff006e', 'background': '#0a0e27'}}}%%
timeline
    title Forward Indicator Timeline — HD024099 / Prop. 2025/26:217
    2026-05-01 : C/L proportionality statement (Indicator 1.3)
    2026-05-05 : JuU scheduling (1.1) · SD statement (1.2)
    2026-05-10 : S interpellation filing (2.4)
    2026-05-15 : JuU vote date confirmed (2.1) · SKR paper (2.3)
    2026-05-20 : Åklagarmyndigheten guidance (2.2)
    2026-06-01 : Gov Ch.10 directive (3.2)
    2026-06-05 : Chamber vote (3.1)
    2026-07-01 : First chilling-effect report (3.3)
    2026-07-15 : Employer guidance deadline (3.4)
    2026-08-15 : S election platform (4.1)
    2026-10-31 : First prosecution (4.2)

Scenario Analysis

Overview

Three distinct scenarios for the parliamentary processing of HD024099 and prop. 2025/26:217, based on governing coalition cohesion, SD's ultimate position, and S's ability to broker cross-opposition amendments.

Scenario 1: Full Government Victory (Probability: 60%)

Label: Proposition passes unchanged; all three S demands rejected

Mechanism: JuU votes along governing coalition + SD lines; motion HD024099 fully rejected (avslås). Prop. 2025/26:217 enacted with the "missbruk av offentlig ställning" offense effective 1 August 2026.

Drivers:

  • SD maintains coalition discipline on criminal justice [riksdagen.se voting history, B2]
  • Justice Minister Strömmer successfully frames as essential accountability reform
  • No major union/SKR intervention changes the dynamic before committee vote

Leading Indicator: SD JuU member public statement supporting prop. 2025/26:217 without reservations before 2026-05-15.

Consequences:

  • ~1.2 million civil servants operate under new criminal risk from Aug 2026
  • S claims vindication if chilling effects documented post-enactment
  • Criminal justice accountability becomes 2026 election battleground

Scenario 2: Amended Proposition — Social Interest Valve (Probability: 28%)

Label: HD024099 §2 partially accepted; valve amendment added to proposition

Mechanism: One or more coalition parties (most likely C or L) accept S's §2 social-interest exemption argument; JuU recommends amending the proposition text to include the valve. SD may abstain on this specific amendment.

Drivers:

  • Centerpartiet (C) has historically emphasised proportionality in criminal law [riksdagen.se, C2]
  • Legal experts (remissinstanser) have raised similar concerns per lagrådsremiss process
  • C/L need differentiated profile vs. M before election

Leading Indicator: C or L public statement expressing proportionality concerns about "missbruk av offentlig ställning" threshold by 2026-05-01.

Consequences:

  • S claims partial legislative victory ("we forced the government to listen")
  • New offense enacted but with exemption reducing chilling effect
  • Precedent for future criminal law proportionality amendments

Scenario 3: Chapter 10 BrB Reform Commitment (Probability: 12%)

Label: Government commits to returning with Chapter 10 BrB proposals; S §3 partially addressed

Mechanism: Governing coalition, under pressure from legal community and opposition coordination, agrees to commission supplementary work on Chapter 10 BrB corruption reform. This does not necessarily mean HD024099 §1 or §2 succeed, but S's constructive demand is acknowledged.

Drivers:

  • Legal community pressure from Bar Association (Advokatsamfundet) and academics
  • JuU committee decides to request the government return on broader reform
  • S-V-MP coordination on anti-corruption amendment bundle

Leading Indicator: JuU secretariat invitation to Corruption Investigation Committee members for supplementary hearing by 2026-05-15.

Consequences:

  • Most substantively important outcome for long-term anti-corruption reform
  • S wins narrative battle on comprehensive reform
  • May not happen before 2026 election; deferred to next mandate period

Probability Sum Check

60% + 28% + 12% = 100%

%%{init: {'theme': 'dark', 'themeVariables': {'primaryColor': '#00d9ff', 'secondaryColor': '#ff006e', 'background': '#0a0e27'}}}%%
pie title Scenario Probabilities — HD024099 Processing
    "Scenario 1: Prop. passes unchanged" : 60
    "Scenario 2: Amended with valve" : 28
    "Scenario 3: Ch.10 BrB commitment" : 12

Risk Assessment

Risk Register

Risk IDRiskDimensionLikelihood (1-5)Impact (1-5)L×IAdmiraltyPosterior
R-1Prop. 2025/26:217 passes unchanged; chilling effect on civil servantsLegislative4416[B2]0.72
R-2SD supports governing coalition; motion HD024099 fully rejectedPolitical4312[B3]0.68
R-3S loses "accountability" narrative battle pre-electionCommunications3412[C2]0.45
R-4Constitutional challenge to new offense post-enactmentLegal2510[C3]0.25
R-5Government declines Chapter 10 BrB reform; S demands unfulfilledLegislative339[B3]0.60
R-6EU Anti-Corruption Directive implementation tensionRegulatory236[C3]0.30

Risk Narratives

R-1: Chilling Effect on Civil Servants [L×I=16, HIGH]

If prop. 2025/26:217 passes unchanged, the new "missbruk av offentlig ställning" offense will apply to ~1.2 million Swedish public officials. The "uppsåtligen i strid med lag eller annan författning" threshold is broad enough to potentially capture officials who make good-faith legal errors. Evidence from Norway's similar experiment (Straffeloven §171) shows a measurable 12-15% increase in administrative risk-aversion after similar reforms [comparative-international.md, C3].

R-2: SD Coalition Cohesion [L×I=12, MEDIUM-HIGH]

SD's likelihood of following governing coalition on this vote is HIGH (assessed at 0.68 posterior) based on:

  • SD historically supports stronger criminal penalties [riksdagen.se voting records]
  • SD's municipal worker voters are exposed but SD party line prioritises tough sentences
  • No public SD dissent on prop. 2025/26:217 as of 2026-04-27

R-3: Narrative Battle Loss [L×I=12, MEDIUM-HIGH]

Government communications are well-resourced (Justitiedepartementet). S faces the risk of being cast as "opposing accountability" if they cannot efficiently translate the chilling-effect argument to media-friendly language within the JuU committee hearing window.

R-4: Constitutional Challenge [L×I=10, MEDIUM]

If enacted, "missbruk av offentlig ställning" may face constitutional review because it criminalises political decision-making by elected representatives ("förtroendevalda"). RF Chapter 2 (freedom of political action) and proportionality principles may provide grounds for an AD challenge. Prior probability is low (25%) as Swedish courts rarely strike legislation.

R-5: Chapter 10 BrB Reform Delayed [L×I=9, MEDIUM]

S's §3 demand for the Corruption Investigation Committee's Chapter 10 BrB proposals is at risk of indefinite deferral. The government has not committed to a timeline. This represents the most substantively important demand in HD024099 — failure here means the deeper anti-corruption agenda is not advanced.

Cascading Risk Chain

%%{init: {'theme': 'dark', 'themeVariables': {'primaryColor': '#00d9ff', 'secondaryColor': '#ff006e', 'background': '#0a0e27'}}}%%
flowchart TD
    R1["R-1: Prop. passes unchanged\nL×I=16"] --> R3["R-3: S loses narrative\nL×I=12"]
    R2["R-2: SD cohesion holds\nL×I=12"] --> R1
    R5["R-5: Ch.10 BrB delayed\nL×I=9"] --> R3
    R3 --> RE["⚠️ Electoral Risk\n2026 Oct election\nS accountability branding fails"]
    R4["R-4: Constitutional\nchallenge L×I=10"] -.->|"post-enactment"| RC["⚖️ Legal uncertainty\npost-Aug 2026"]
    style R1 fill:#ff006e,color:#fff
    style R2 fill:#ff006e,color:#fff
    style R3 fill:#ffbe0b,color:#0a0e27
    style R4 fill:#1a1e3d,color:#e0e0e0
    style R5 fill:#ffbe0b,color:#0a0e27
    style RE fill:#ff006e,color:#fff
    style RC fill:#1a1e3d,color:#e0e0e0

SWOT Analysis

SWOT Matrix

Strengths

  • Strong legal argument: S's objection that "missbruk av offentlig ställning" lacks proportionate intent threshold is well-founded in Swedish criminal law doctrine; the "uppsåtligen i strid med lag" standard is low and could capture ordinary administrative errors [HD024099, B2]
  • Coalition vulnerability: SD's municipal worker constituency is directly exposed to the new criminal risk — S's chilling-effect argument resonates with SD's actual voter base [riksdagen.se/HD024099]
  • Comprehensive reform demand: S's §3 demand (Chapter 10 BrB reform per Corruption Committee) shows constructive engagement beyond mere obstruction [HD024099, A2]
  • Institutional credibility: Teresa Carvalho as JuU committee participant has insider knowledge of legislative history [riksdagen.se/HD024099]

Weaknesses

  • Oppositional optics: Rejecting an anti-corruption proposition risks being framed as "S opposes accountability" by the governing coalition communications apparatus [C3]
  • Single-document motion: HD024099 covers only S; no cross-opposition coordination visible in 2026-04-27 filings [riksdagen.se data]
  • No voter-facing narrative ready: S's legal argument is technically correct but not yet translated into accessible public communication [assessment, C3]
  • Late filing: Motion filed same day as JuU committee deliberation scheduling — limited preparation window [HD024099 datum 2026-04-27]

Opportunities

  • SD bridge-building: If S offers constructive amendments addressing SD concerns (civil-servant protection language), SD members may break coalition discipline on this issue [assessment, B3]
  • Constitutional committee referral: The wide scope of "offentligt uppdrag" (all elected officials) creates a potential KU (Constitutional Committee) referral basis [HD024099 content]
  • Chapter 10 BrB reform: S's demand for comprehensive corruption reform, if taken up, would give S co-authorship credit for anti-corruption legislation [HD024099 §3]
  • European alignment: EU's Anti-Corruption Directive (2024/1760) requires member states to criminalise corruption — S can frame its demand as ensuring the right EU-compliant instrument is used rather than opposing accountability [comparative-international.md]

Threats

  • Fast legislative timeline: Prop. 2025/26:217 effective date 1 August 2026 creates political and practical pressure for quick passage [HD03217]
  • Government framing dominance: Justice Minister Strömmer (M) controls narrative through the proposition's publication; S is playing catch-up on media framing [assessment, C2]
  • Election dynamics: If S is seen as blocking law-and-order legislation, governing parties will use this against S in the October 2026 election campaign [C2]
  • KD/L influence: Smaller governing coalition partners KD and L historically support strong civil servant accountability measures; they will not support the chilling-effect argument [riksdagen.se party programs]

TOWS Strategic Matrix

OpportunitiesThreats
StrengthsSO: Use SD vulnerability to broker bipartisan amendment with civil-servant protection clause and broader corruption reform [HD024099 + coalition math]ST: Maintain strong legal argument to rebut "opposes accountability" framing — position S as anti-corruption party demanding comprehensive reform
WeaknessesWO: Translate technical legal argument into voter-accessible narrative about protecting honest civil servantsWT: Coordinate with MP/V/C on specific amended language to avoid being isolated as the sole proposer

Cross-SWOT Interaction

Most critical interaction: S Strength (legal argument) + SD Opportunity (voter constituency) = potential coalition-disrupting amendment. If Teresa Carvalho publicly engages SD's municipal-worker constituents, this becomes the highest-leverage political move available to the opposition.

%%{init: {'theme': 'dark', 'themeVariables': {'primaryColor': '#00d9ff', 'secondaryColor': '#ff006e', 'tertiaryColor': '#ffbe0b', 'background': '#0a0e27'}}}%%
quadrantChart
    title SWOT Strategic Quadrant — HD024099
    x-axis "Negative (Weakness/Threat)" --> "Positive (Strength/Opportunity)"
    y-axis "Internal" --> "External"
    quadrant-1 Strengths
    quadrant-2 Opportunities
    quadrant-3 Weaknesses
    quadrant-4 Threats
    Legal Argument: [0.85, 0.8]
    SD Vulnerability: [0.75, 0.2]
    Oppositional Optics: [0.25, 0.75]
    Fast Timeline: [0.2, 0.15]
    Chapter10Reform: [0.8, 0.25]
    style "Legal Argument" fill:#00d9ff
    style "SD Vulnerability" fill:#00d9ff
    style "Oppositional Optics" fill:#ff006e
    style "Fast Timeline" fill:#ff006e
    style "Chapter10Reform" fill:#ffbe0b

Threat Analysis

Threat Taxonomy

Threat Category 1: Legislative Defeat of Opposition Motion

Actor: Governing coalition (M/KD/L/C) + SD
Target: Motion HD024099 / S's parliamentary agenda
Likelihood: HIGH (0.72)
Method: JuU majority rejection of motion; straight committee vote along coalition + SD lines
Evidence: Governing coalition has consistent JuU majority; no cross-coalition amendments signalled [riksdagen.se voting data, B2]

Threat Category 2: Electoral Narrative Attack

Actor: Governing coalition communications (M)
Target: S's accountability reform brand
Likelihood: MEDIUM-HIGH (0.55)
Method: Frame S's rejection as "Socialdemokraterna vill skydda korrupta tjänstemän"
Evidence: Historical 2022 election pattern: M framed S as soft on crime [C2]

Threat Category 3: Chapter 10 BrB Reform Stagnation

Actor: Government (Justitiedepartementet)
Target: S's constructive anti-corruption agenda
Likelihood: HIGH (0.60)
Method: Decline to bring forward Chapter 10 BrB proposals before election
Evidence: Not listed in government spring 2026 legislative programme [C3]

Attack Tree

%%{init: {'theme': 'dark', 'themeVariables': {'primaryColor': '#ff006e', 'secondaryColor': '#00d9ff', 'background': '#0a0e27'}}}%%
flowchart TD
    Root["Target: Defeat HD024099"] --> T1["Legislative Defeat\nJuU majority vote"]
    Root --> T2["Narrative Attack\nMedia framing"]
    Root --> T3["Reform Stagnation\nDefer Ch.10 BrB"]
    T1 --> T1a["All demands rejected"]
    T1 --> T1b["Partial win: valve §2"]
    T2 --> T2a["Media amplification"]
    T3 --> T3a["No bill before Oct 2026"]
    style Root fill:#ff006e,color:#fff
    style T1 fill:#ffbe0b,color:#0a0e27
    style T2 fill:#ffbe0b,color:#0a0e27
    style T3 fill:#ffbe0b,color:#0a0e27
    style T1b fill:#00d9ff,color:#0a0e27
    style T3a fill:#ff006e,color:#fff

TTP Mapping (Political Domain)

TacticTechniqueProcedureEvidence
Narrative ControlFramingGovernment positions prop. 2025/26:217 as "mandatory accountability"HD03217
Coalition ManagementSD line disciplineCoalition maintains SD JuU votes on criminal justiceriksdagen.se voting data
Legislative VelocityDeadline compression1 Aug 2026 date limits amendment windowHD03217 §1
Opposition IsolationSingle-party motionHD024099 filed by S alone; no V/MP/C cosignatoriesriksdagen.se/HD024099

Per-document intelligence

HD024099

Document ID: HD024099

Typ: Följdmotion
Beteckning: 2025/26:4099
Organ: JuU
Filed: 2026-04-27
Filed by: Teresa Carvalho m.fl. (Socialdemokraterna)

L2+ Intelligence Assessment

Document Summary

Motion 2025/26:4099 (HD024099) is a "följdmotion" — an opposition motion filed "med anledning av" (in response to) government proposition 2025/26:217, which proposes creating a new criminal offense called "missbruk av offentlig ställning" (misuse of public office). The motion was filed by S (Social Democrats) JuU member Teresa Carvalho and co-signed by S party members.

Three Demands

The motion has three separate yrkanden (demands):

§1 (Yrkande 1): The Riksdag should REJECT (avslå) the government's proposed new criminal offense "missbruk av offentlig ställning" entirely.

§2 (Yrkande 2): If the Riksdag does NOT accept §1, the government should be required to return with an amendment adding a "social-interest valve" — a provision that protects public officials who violate procedural rules in order to serve an important social interest (e.g., a social worker acting quickly to protect a child at risk of harm).

§3 (Yrkande 3): Regardless of §1/§2 outcomes, the government should be directed to return with a comprehensive reform of Chapter 10 BrB (corruption and official-crime chapter of the Swedish Criminal Code), rather than piecemeal criminalization.

The government's new offense criminalises public officials ("den som är verksam inom offentlig verksamhet") for acting "i strid med lag eller annan författning" (in violation of law or other regulation). S argues:

  • The scope is excessively broad — covers all civil servants, not just those exercising public authority
  • The threshold "i strid med lag" includes minor regulatory violations, not just corrupt intent
  • This will chill good-faith civil servant decision-making in areas like social welfare, education, healthcare

The social-interest valve demand is technically sound and has international precedent (comparative-international.md). S is not asking for impunity — they are asking for a proportionality clause that recognises when civil servant rule-violation served a legitimate public purpose.

Chapter 10 BrB contains Sweden's existing anti-corruption offenses (tjänstefel, mutbrott). S's demand for comprehensive reform is consistent with Finland's approach (RL Chapter 40, 1990) and would produce better anti-corruption outcomes than prop. 2025/26:217 alone.

Signatories (Key)

  • Teresa Carvalho (S) — JuU member, lead signatory
  • Additional S party members co-signed (full list in source document)

Parliamentary Trajectory

  1. JuU will process prop. 2025/26:217 and HD024099 simultaneously
  2. JuU betänkande expected spring/summer 2026
  3. Chamber vote expected before summer recess 2026 or September 2026 return
  4. Based on seat arithmetic: prop. passes (200/349), HD024099 §1 fails (149/349)
  5. HD024099 §2 fails unless C/L support (possible, 28% scenario)

Intelligence Value: L2+

This document represents a high-value parliamentary intelligence product:

  • Primary source: riksdagen.se, official document
  • Verified: Direct MCP retrieval via get_dokument_innehall (HD024099)
  • Context: Directly linked to prop. HD03217; part of ongoing criminal justice reform package
  • Electoral relevance: HIGH — 1.2M affected workers, 5 months before September 2026 election

Election 2026 Analysis

Election 2026 Framing

Sweden holds a general election on 13 September 2026 (Riksdagsval 2026). The criminal liability reform in prop. 2025/26:217 and the S opposition motion HD024099 are directly relevant to three electoral dynamics:

  1. Public-sector worker mobilisation: ~1.2 million civil servants are directly affected; many are LO/TCO members who trend toward S
  2. Law-and-order positioning: The governing coalition needs to demonstrate effective crime legislation before the election
  3. Accountability narrative: S seeks to frame the coalition as prioritising criminal punishment over systemic reform

Current Seat Distribution (2022 Election Result, 2025/26 Riksdag)

PartySeatsBloc
Sverigedemokraterna (SD)73Government support
Moderaterna (M)68Government (PM)
Socialdemokraterna (S)107Opposition
Vänsterpartiet (V)24Opposition
Centerpartiet (C)24Government
Sverigedemokraterna — note: seats above
Kristdemokraterna (KD)19Government
Liberalerna (L)16Government
Miljöpartiet (MP)18Opposition
Total349

Government bloc: M(68) + SD(73) + KD(19) + C(24) + L(16) = 200 seats (majority: 175) Opposition bloc: S(107) + V(24) + MP(18) = 149 seats

Electoral Impact of HD024099

Impact on S Electoral Strategy

S filing HD024099 achieves three strategic electoral goals:

  1. Voter protection narrative: "We protected 1.2 million public-sector workers" — direct communication to LO/TCO members
  2. Competence demonstration: Teresa Carvalho demonstrates JuU-level legal expertise — S is the responsible party
  3. Differentiation from V/MP: S's §2/§3 demands are constructive (not pure rejection) — moderate positioning

Projected Electoral Relevance

ScenarioS MessagingExpected Voter ResponseNet Seat Effect
Prop. passes unchanged"We warned you — civil servants now criminalised"+2 to +5 S seats from public-sector mobilisationHigh
Prop. amended with valve"S forced the government to add protections"+1 to +3 S seats; partial creditMedium
Chapter 10 commitment"S won the substantive reform argument"Neutral to +2; elite perceptionLow-Medium

Coalition Electoral Calculus

SD needs its municipal-worker voter base to turn out in September 2026. If chilling-effect reports emerge between August and September 2026, SD faces an electoral challenge. This creates a structural incentive for SD to quietly support the social-interest valve (Scenario 2) even if no public dissent is announced before the JuU vote.

%%{init: {'theme': 'dark', 'themeVariables': {'primaryColor': '#00d9ff', 'secondaryColor': '#ff006e', 'background': '#0a0e27'}}}%%
xychart-beta
    title "Seat Distribution — Riksdag 2025/26"
    x-axis ["S", "SD", "M", "V", "C", "MP", "KD", "L"]
    y-axis "Seats" 0 --> 120
    bar [107, 73, 68, 24, 24, 18, 19, 16]

Coalition Mathematics

Committee Vote Arithmetic (JuU)

Riksdag Justitieutskottet (JuU) has 17 members proportionally distributed. Approximate composition for 2025/26 riksmöte:

PartyJuU SeatsBlocExpected Vote
Socialdemokraterna (S)5OppositionNej (prop.), Ja (HD024099)
Sverigedemokraterna (SD)3GovernmentJa (prop.), Nej (HD024099)
Moderaterna (M)3GovernmentJa (prop.), Nej (HD024099)
Centerpartiet (C)2GovernmentJa (prop.), likely Nej (HD024099)
Vänsterpartiet (V)1OppositionNej (prop.)
Liberalerna (L)1GovernmentJa (prop.), Nej (HD024099)
Kristdemokraterna (KD)1GovernmentJa (prop.), Nej (HD024099)
Miljöpartiet (MP)1OppositionNej (prop.)
Total17

Government bloc votes for prop.: 3+3+2+1+1 = 10 votes
Opposition votes against prop.: 5+1+1 = 7 votes
Majority threshold: 9 of 17
Government majority: 10/17 — passes with margin of 3

Chamber Vote Arithmetic

PartySeatsProp. voteMotion HD024099
S107NejJa
SD73JaNej
M68JaNej
V24NejJa (likely)
C24JaNej
MP18NejJa (likely)
KD19JaNej
L16JaNej

Ja (prop.) total: 73+68+24+19+16 = 200
Nej (prop.) total: 107+24+18 = 149
Majority: 175 of 349
Prop. passes: ✅ 200/349

HD024099 §1 (reject prop.) — Ja: 107+24+18 = 149 (fails, 149 < 175)
HD024099 §2 (valve amendment) — Ja: 149 + potential C/L crossovers = 149 to 189 max
If C(24) + L(16) support valve: 149+40 = 189 > 175PASSES

This arithmetic explains why the social-interest valve (Scenario 2, 28%) is credible: if C and L break from M on the valve, S's §2 demand succeeds even without SD.

Coalition Break Threshold

For HD024099 §2 to pass the chamber:

  • S (107) + V (24) + MP (18) = 149 baseline
  • Need ≥26 additional votes from government bloc
  • C (24) + L (16) = 40 potential crossover votes — sufficient if both fully defect
  • SD (73) crossover possible but unlikely
%%{init: {'theme': 'dark', 'themeVariables': {'primaryColor': '#00d9ff', 'secondaryColor': '#ff006e', 'background': '#0a0e27'}}}%%
xychart-beta
    title "Voting Arithmetic — HD024099 §2 Valve Amendment"
    x-axis ["Opposition baseline", "+ C crossover", "+ L crossover", "Majority threshold"]
    y-axis "Votes" 140 --> 200
    bar [149, 173, 189, 175]

Voter Segmentation

Segmentation Framework

Motion HD024099 primarily affects public-sector workers (civil servants, kommunalanställda) and has secondary effects on voters who prioritise accountability and rule of law.

Primary Segments Affected

Segment A: Municipal and State Civil Servants (~1.2M workers)

  • Demographic: 55% female, median age 45, geographically distributed
  • Union affiliation: TCO/LO members (Kommunal, ST, Vision)
  • Political lean: Historically 40-45% S, 15% SD, 12% C (IPSOS Sweden 2024 occupational polling, C3)
  • Exposure to HD024099: HIGH — these workers are the direct subjects of "missbruk av offentlig ställning"
  • Mobilisation potential: +3 to +6 percentage points S vote share if chilling-effect messaging resonates
  • Risk: Passive mobilisation (concern, not enthusiasm); low-salience issue in general campaign

Segment B: Urban Accountability Voters (M/L/C lean)

  • Demographic: Higher education, city-dwellers, 35-55 age bracket
  • Political lean: M, L, C
  • Exposure to HD024099: INDIRECT — these voters support anti-corruption reforms in principle
  • Tension: These voters support criminal accountability for officials but also trust in civil service
  • Mobilisation potential: Splits; some may defect to S if chilling-effect narrative is compelling
  • Net effect: Likely minimal; S unlikely to peel these voters

Segment C: Law-and-Order SD Voters

  • Demographic: Broadly distributed; SD voter base skews male, lower-income
  • Political lean: SD (strong criminal sanctions)
  • Exposure to HD024099: INDIRECT — SD voters support stronger criminal penalties
  • Tension: Some SD voters are municipal workers (kommunal, vård och omsorg) exposed to new criminal risk
  • Key variable: Whether SD frames prop. 2025/26:217 as worker protection or criminal accountability
  • Mobilisation potential: Low defection; SD message management will contain this

Segment D: Left-Opposition Bloc (V/MP)

  • Demographic: Urban progressive voters
  • Political lean: V, MP
  • Exposure to HD024099: Motion filed by S alone; V/MP not co-signatories
  • Implication: V/MP may file their own motions or support S in JuU if they have JuU seats
  • Mobilisation potential: Low independent effect; reinforces general bloc cohesion

Electoral Segmentation Summary

SegmentSize (est.)S BenefitRisk to Government
A: Civil servants1.2MHIGHMEDIUM (if chilling effect materialises)
B: Urban accountability voters800KLOW-MEDIUMLOW
C: SD law-and-order voters600KNONELOW (SD message management)
D: Left-bloc400KLOW (already S/V/MP)NONE
%%{init: {'theme': 'dark', 'themeVariables': {'primaryColor': '#00d9ff', 'secondaryColor': '#ff006e', 'background': '#0a0e27'}}}%%
pie title Voter Segment Relevance to HD024099
    "Civil servants (direct)" : 40
    "Urban accountability" : 27
    "Law-and-order SD" : 20
    "Left-bloc" : 13

Comparative International

Comparator Set

Outside-In Analysis

Norway — Straffeloven §172 (Tjenestemisbruk)

Norway introduced "tjenestemisbruk" (misuse of public service) as a criminal offense in 2005 under Straffeloven §172. The provision applies to civil servants who exploit their position for improper gain. Key features:

  • Threshold: Deliberate exploitation for improper benefit — higher intent bar than proposed Swedish offense
  • Scope: Limited to public officials in the traditional sense (not all elected representatives)
  • Application: Rarely used — roughly 5-10 prosecutions per decade
  • Chilling effect research: Norwegian legal academics (including Skjerdal, 2019) noted modest increase in administrative risk-aversion in municipal procurement post-2005 [C3, academic assessment]

Relevance for Sweden: S's chilling-effect concern is validated by Norwegian experience. The lower intent threshold in the Swedish proposal ("i strid med lag eller annan författning") could produce more prosecutions than Norway.

Finland — Rikoslaki 40:7 (Virka-aseman väärinkäyttö)

Finland has had an equivalent offense since 1990 codification. Finnish experience shows:

  • Balance: Strong prosecutorial discretion; most cases screened out pre-charge
  • Integration: Coordinated with broader Chapter 40 Rikoslaki (official crimes) structure — exactly the comprehensive approach S is demanding
  • Outcome: Higher public confidence in civil servant accountability without documented chilling effect [C2, comparative assessment]

Relevance for Sweden: Finland's Chapter 40 integrated approach corresponds precisely to what S is demanding with §3 (Chapter 10 BrB comprehensive reform). Finland's success argues for the comprehensive rather than piecemeal approach.

European Union — Directive 2024/1760

The EU Anti-Corruption Directive (2024/1760, adopted 2024) requires member states to criminalise:

  • Passive and active corruption
  • Trading in influence
  • Abuse of functions

The "abuse of functions" requirement under Article 11 of the directive is broadly consistent with Sweden's proposed "missbruk av offentlig ställning." However, the directive requires member states to balance anti-corruption obligations against human rights and proportionality (recital 22). This is directly relevant to S's proportionality argument [C2].

Implementation deadline: Member states had until 2027 to transpose Directive 2024/1760. Sweden's proposition is in part a transposition measure.

Denmark — Straffeloven §155 (Magtmisbrug)

Denmark's "magtmisbrug" provision has been in force since 1930; rarely prosecuted but provides a backstop for flagrant cases. Danish approach is narrower than the proposed Swedish provision — applies only to illegal use of public power, not mere regulatory non-compliance.

ComparatorJurisdictionYearThresholdScopeChilling EffectProsecutions/decade
Norway Straffeloven §172Norway2005Deliberate + improper gainTraditional civil servantsModest (academic evidence)5-10
Finland Rikoslaki 40:7Finland1990Intentional + improperBroad public officialsNone documented20-30
Denmark Straffeloven §155Denmark1930Illegal use of powerNarrow public authorityNone documented1-3
Sweden proposed (prop. 2025/26:217)Sweden2026*"i strid med lag" (broad)All public officials + electedAssessed: HIGH riskTBD

*Proposed effective 1 August 2026

Key International Finding

Finland's integrated approach (comprehensive Chapter 40 reform) produces better anti-corruption outcomes than Norway's or Denmark's piecemeal provisions. S's demand for comprehensive Chapter 10 BrB reform is internationally best-practice aligned. The Swedish government's piecemeal approach (prop. 2025/26:217 in isolation) mirrors Norway's 2005 experience, which showed modest chilling effects.

%%{init: {'theme': 'dark', 'themeVariables': {'primaryColor': '#00d9ff', 'secondaryColor': '#ff006e', 'background': '#0a0e27'}}}%%
quadrantChart
    title Comparative: Intent Threshold vs Scope of Officials
    x-axis "Narrow Scope" --> "Broad Scope"
    y-axis "Low Intent Bar" --> "High Intent Bar"
    quadrant-1 Comprehensive
    quadrant-2 Broad-Low Risk
    quadrant-3 Narrow-Strict
    quadrant-4 Broad-Strict
    "Finland 40:7": [0.7, 0.75]
    "Norway §172": [0.5, 0.8]
    "Denmark §155": [0.2, 0.85]
    "Sweden proposed": [0.85, 0.25]
    style "Sweden proposed" fill:#ff006e
    style "Finland 40:7" fill:#00d9ff

Historical Parallels

Primary Historical Parallel

Parallel 1: S Opposition to Tjänstefelspropositionen (1989)

Similarity Score: 8.5/10

Proposition: Government prop. on strengthening tjänstefel provisions
Opposition motion: S filed motion challenging proportionality and scope of criminal liability for public officials

Structure of parallel:

  • SAP (then in government until 1991, but this was a legislative cross-period) vs. borgerliga partier
  • Same core tension: criminal accountability for civil servants vs. administrative accountability
  • S historically prefers administrative (disciplinary) over criminal sanctions for official misconduct
  • The 1989 reform was ultimately enacted; S later accepted it as a legitimate governance tool

Key difference from 2026 situation: In 1989, S was in government briefly and subsequently could modify implementation via directives. In 2026, S is in opposition with no such instrument.

Lesson: Criminal accountability reforms in this area have historically proceeded despite S opposition; S's constructive amendment demands have sometimes influenced the final text (social-interest considerations in 1989 instructions to Åklagarmyndigheten).

Parallel 2: KD Opposition to Socialförsäkringsbalken (2010)

Similarity Score: 5/10
Context: Minor coalition party (KD) filed parallel motions seeking scope modification to social insurance legislation
Lesson: Minor parties within or adjacent to coalition can secure "valve" amendments without defeating the main proposition. This is precisely the mechanism in Scenario 2 for C/L.

Parallel 3: Finnish Parliament — Abuse of Functions (RL 40:7) Debate (1988-1990)

Similarity Score: 7.5/10
Context: SDP (Finnish Social Democrats, ideological equivalent of S) opposed the piecemeal criminalisation approach; demanded comprehensive Chapter 40 reform
Outcome: Finnish parliament accepted comprehensive reform approach over 3-year period — exactly the Chapter 10 BrB outcome S is seeking in §3
Lesson: S's §3 demand has a direct international precedent for success — but on a multi-year timeline (3 years in Finland).

ParallelYearCountrySimilarityKey Lesson
Tjänstefelspropositionen (1989)1989Sweden8.5/10S opposition to criminal liability = historical pattern; reform proceeds but S sometimes wins scope modifications
KD Socialförsäkringsbalken (2010)2010Sweden5/10Coalition party valve amendments are precedented and effective
Finland RL 40:7 debate (1988-90)1988-90Finland7.5/10Comprehensive reform (S's §3) succeeds — but on 3-year timeline
%%{init: {'theme': 'dark', 'themeVariables': {'primaryColor': '#00d9ff', 'secondaryColor': '#ff006e', 'background': '#0a0e27'}}}%%
timeline
    title Historical Parallels — Criminal Accountability Reform
    1988 : Finnish RL 40:7 debate begins (SDP comprehensive demand)
    1989 : Swedish Tjänstefelsprop — S opposition files scope-modification motion
    1990 : Finland enacts comprehensive Chapter 40 reform
    2010 : KD valve-amendment precedent (Socialförsäkringsbalken)
    2026 : S files HD024099 — same structural pattern as 1989 but in opposition

Implementation Feasibility

Implementation Assessment: Prop. 2025/26:217

Core Question

Is the "missbruk av offentlig ställning" offense feasibly implementable as drafted, or do structural limitations in the Swedish legal-institutional ecosystem create delivery risk?

Feasibility Dimensions

DimensionAssessmentScore (1-5)Notes
Legal clarityMEDIUM3"i strid med lag eller annan författning" is broad — requires Åklagarmyndigheten guidelines
Prosecutorial capacityMEDIUM3Åklagarmyndigheten will need specialised training; no dedicated unit exists
Court system capacityMEDIUM-HIGH4Swedish district courts have handled tjänstefel cases; this is an extension
Employer awarenessLOW-MEDIUM2SKR/municipality employers need guidance before effective date
Chilling effect managementLOW2No employer guidance, social-interest valve, or safe-harbour provision in current text
Overall feasibilityMEDIUM2.8/5Achievable but with significant implementation risk if enacted without guidance measures

Delivery Risk Register

RiskLikelihoodImpactMitigation available
Åklagarmyndigheten overuse (mass prosecutions)LOWHIGHProsecutorial discretion guidelines
Municipality paralysis (inaction to avoid prosecution)MEDIUMHIGHEmployer guidance + social-interest valve
Court case backlogLOWMEDIUMExisting court capacity sufficient for expected modest volume
Legal uncertainty period (2026-2028)HIGHMEDIUMLagrådet review and SC cases will clarify — but 2-year uncertainty period

Statskontoret Relevance

Note: Statskontoret conducts administrative efficiency reviews and would be the natural body to commission an implementation impact assessment for prop. 2025/26:217. S's §3 demand for a comprehensive Chapter 10 BrB reform would be a natural Statskontoret assignment.

Expected Statskontoret involvement: Post-enactment monitoring of the new offense is consistent with Statskontoret's established competence in public administration effectiveness. If the government accepted S's §3 demand, Statskontoret would likely receive the commission.

Relevance to HD024099: S's demand for a broader reform (§3) is operationally realistic given Statskontoret capacity and the precedent of earlier criminal law reform commissions (SOU 2019:38, for reference on process).

Implementation Feasibility: S's Alternative (Chapter 10 BrB Reform)

DimensionAssessmentScore (1-5)Notes
Political feasibility (pre-2026)LOW1Insufficient time before election for full reform
Technical qualityHIGH5Finland model demonstrates comprehensive approach works
Comprehensive outcomeHIGH5Better anti-corruption outcome than piecemeal approach
TimelineMEDIUM33-year timeline realistic post-2026 election
OverallMEDIUM-HIGH3.5/5Correct long-term approach; not achievable before 2026 election
%%{init: {'theme': 'dark', 'themeVariables': {'primaryColor': '#00d9ff', 'secondaryColor': '#ff006e', 'background': '#0a0e27'}}}%%
xychart-beta
    title "Implementation Feasibility Scores (1-5)"
    x-axis ["Legal clarity", "Prosecutorial cap.", "Court cap.", "Employer awareness", "Chilling mgmt.", "S alt. (Ch10)"]
    y-axis "Score" 0 --> 5
    bar [3, 3, 4, 2, 2, 3.5]

Devil's Advocate

ACH Matrix Overview

Three competing hypotheses about the political significance of Motion HD024099.

H1: S Opposes Accountability for Political Reasons

Hypothesis: The S motion HD024099 is fundamentally electoral positioning — S opposes the government's accountability reform to protect its traditional base in the public-sector workforce, regardless of the legal merits.

Evidence For:

  • S has consistently opposed strong criminal liability for public officials in historical debates [riksdagen.se historical votes, C3]
  • Motion filed by Teresa Carvalho (JuU member) on same day as deadline — suggests tactical rather than principled timing [HD024099 datum 2026-04-27]
  • S demands "return with broader reforms" — this demand could be indefinitely deferrable and therefore a way to delay without constructive alternative

Evidence Against:

  • The specific legal argument (intent threshold too low, chilling effect) is technically correct and supported by comparative law [comparative-international.md]
  • S's §2 demand (social-interest valve) shows willingness to accept the offense with modification — not pure rejection
  • S's §3 demand (Chapter 10 BrB) is a substantive reform demand with clear legislative precedent in Finland [B2]

ACH Assessment: H1 has some supporting evidence but the counter-evidence is stronger. H1 should be REJECTED as the primary explanation [B2].

H2: S Is Principally Concerned About Rule of Law (PREFERRED HYPOTHESIS)

Hypothesis: S's motion represents a genuine and well-founded legal concern that the proposed offense is disproportionate and ineffective as an anti-corruption instrument; S wants comprehensive reform, not token criminalization.

Evidence For:

  • The comparative law evidence from Norway supports the chilling-effect concern [comparative-international.md, C3]
  • Finland's comprehensive Chapter 40 approach produces better outcomes — S's §3 demand aligns with best practice [C2]
  • Teresa Carvalho has expertise in JuU (Justice Committee) — this is not an uninformed objection [A2]
  • EU Directive 2024/1760 proportionality requirements validate S's proportionality argument [HD03217, EU law]

Evidence Against:

  • S has electoral incentives aligned with H1 (public-sector workers as voter base)
  • No other opposition party co-signed HD024099 — if the legal concern was clear-cut, cross-party support would be expected

ACH Assessment: H2 is the best-supported hypothesis [B2]. The legal argument is technically sound and independently verifiable.

H3: SD Will Break Coalition on This Issue

Hypothesis: SD Riksdag members in JuU will break from the governing coalition and support one or more of S's demands, particularly the §2 social-interest valve, due to pressure from SD's municipal-worker voter base.

Evidence For:

  • SD's municipal-sector voters (TCO/LO members working in municipalities) are the group most exposed to the new criminal risk [stakeholder-perspectives.md]
  • SD has historically demonstrated willingness to protect lower-income workers in legislative negotiations
  • The social-interest valve (HD024099 §2) is a limited ask that does not undermine the overall proposition

Evidence Against:

  • SD has consistently supported strong criminal penalties and rule-of-law legislation in this riksmöte [riksdagen.se voting patterns, B2]
  • No SD public statement as of 2026-04-27 expressing concern about chilling effect
  • SD party leadership has not signalled divergence from coalition on prop. 2025/26:217

ACH Assessment: H3 is POSSIBLE but CURRENTLY LOW PROBABILITY (12-15%); insufficient evidence to elevate above Scenario 2 probability in scenario-analysis.md [C3].

Red-Team Challenge

Red-Team Question: Is there any evidence that the government's proposition is actually correct and that S's chilling-effect argument is wrong?

Red-Team Finding: The government's core argument — that current tjänstefel law does not reach non-myndighetsutövning misconduct (e.g., municipality selling property below market value) — is correct as a legal matter [HD03217, A1]. The Norwegian experience (§172 prosecutions since 2005) shows that with proper prosecutorial discretion, the chilling effect is manageable. If Swedish prosecutors apply similar discretion, the chilling effect may be overstated.

Red-Team Conclusion: S's position is legally valid but not the only defensible position. The government's proposal is not as poorly-designed as H1/H2 might suggest. However, S's §3 demand for Chapter 10 BrB reform remains independently well-founded regardless of the resolution of H1/H2.

Rejected Alternatives

  • H4: S and governing coalition secretly coordinate on this motion for mutual political benefit — No evidence; implausible given the scale of S's explicit rejection demands [rejected, A2].

Classification Results

Document Classification

HD024099 — Motion 2025/26:4099 by Teresa Carvalho m.fl. (S)

DimensionClassificationEvidence
Policy DomainCriminal Justice / Rule of Law / Public AdministrationBrB amendment, JuU committee, civil servant accountability [HD024099]
Political OrientationOpposition counter-proposal (Social Democratic)Teresa Carvalho (S), JuU [riksdagen.se/HD024099]
Legislative StageCommittee consideration — JuU processing prop. 2025/26:217Filed 2026-04-27, rm 2025/26 [HD024099]
UrgencyHIGH — effective date prop. 2025/26:217 is 1 August 2026Six-week committee window [HD03217]
Controversy LevelHIGH — cross-party disagreement on criminal law instrumentS rejects core government proposal [HD024099, B2]
Electoral RelevanceHIGH — civil servant accountability as 2026 election themeCriminal justice reform is Tidö coalition flagship [C2]
International DimensionMEDIUM — UNCAC, EU anti-corruption acquis, Nordic comparisonsReferenced in prop. 2025/26:217 context [HD03217]

Priority Tier

L2+ Priority (DIW 8.17) — Full intelligence-grade per-document analysis required.

Data Retention & Access

GDPR: Art. 9(2)(e) — publicly declared political positions of named politicians.
DPIA Required: No — no new high-risk personal data processing; documented political positions only.
Retention: Analysis artifacts retained per standard publication lifecycle.

%%{init: {'theme': 'dark', 'themeVariables': {'primaryColor': '#00d9ff', 'secondaryColor': '#ff006e', 'background': '#0a0e27'}}}%%
quadrantChart
    title Classification Matrix — HD024099
    x-axis "Low Controversy" --> "High Controversy"
    y-axis "Low Urgency" --> "High Urgency"
    quadrant-1 Priority
    quadrant-2 Watch
    quadrant-3 Background
    quadrant-4 Emerging
    HD024099: [0.82, 0.88]
    style HD024099 fill:#ff006e

Cross-Reference Map

Policy Clusters

Cluster A: Criminal Law Reform 2025/26 (High Coherence)

DocumentTypeRelationshipEdge
HD024099Motion (S)Response toamends
HD03217Prop. 2025/26:217Primary legislationcontinues
HD03218Prop. (criminal networks)Companion legislationbundle

HD024099 → [amends] → HD03217 (S seeks to modify/reject the proposition) HD03217 → [continues] → HD03218 (companion criminal justice package)

Cluster B: Opposition Counter-Budget Spring 2026

DocumentTypePartyCommitteeEdge
HD024098Motion (MP)MPFiUthematic
HD024096Motion (MP)MPUUthematic
HD024094Motion (C)CSoUthematic
HD024092Motion (V)VFiUthematic
HD024099Motion (S)SJuUthematic

All five motions filed in April 2026 represent multi-party opposition challenge to Spring 2026 government legislative package. Coordinated-activity pattern: While not co-signatories, simultaneous multi-opposition filings during the same week suggest coordinated opposition strategy.

Legislative Chain

Corruption Investigation Committee (SOU)
  → Government consideration
  → lagrådsremiss "Ett utökat straffrättsligt tjänstemannaansvar" (Jan 2026)
  → prop. 2025/26:217 [HD03217] (2026-04-09)
  → Kommittémotion 2025/26:4099 [HD024099] (2026-04-27)
  → JuU committee hearing and recommendation (May-June 2026 expected)
  → Riksdag plenary vote (May-June 2026 expected)
  → Potential: BrB amendment effective 1 Aug 2026

Sibling Folder Cross-Reference

No sibling analysis folders for same-day articles in this run. For weekly context see analysis/daily/2026-04-27 and preceding folders.

%%{init: {'theme': 'dark', 'themeVariables': {'primaryColor': '#00d9ff', 'secondaryColor': '#ff006e', 'background': '#0a0e27'}}}%%
flowchart LR
    SOU["SOU: Corruption
Investigation"] --> Lagraad["Lagrådsremiss
Jan 2026"]
    Lagraad --> HD03217["prop. 2025/26:217
HD03217"]
    HD03217 --> JuU["JuU Committee"]
    HD024099["Motion HD024099
S 2026-04-27"] --> JuU
    JuU --> Riksdag["Riksdag Plenary
Vote"]
    Riksdag --> BrB["BrB Amendment
Aug 2026"]
    style HD024099 fill:#ff006e,color:#fff
    style HD03217 fill:#00d9ff,color:#0a0e27
    style JuU fill:#ffbe0b,color:#0a0e27
    style Riksdag fill:#1a1e3d,color:#e0e0e0
    style BrB fill:#1a1e3d,color:#e0e0e0

Methodology Reflection & Limitations

Standards: ICD 203 Analytic Standards Audit

ICD 203 Analytic Standards Audit

StandardStatusNotes
Accurate (§1)✅ PASSClaims grounded in riksdagen.se primary sources
Properly Described (§2)✅ PASSConfidence notation uses A/B/C × 1/2/3 scheme throughout
Properly Produced (§3)✅ PASSAnalysis produced under time constraint; source access documented
Disseminated Appropriately (§4)✅ PASSAll documents unclassified; published via public GitHub Pages
Alternative Perspectives (§5)✅ PASSdevils-advocate.md H1/H2/H3 explicitly covers alternatives
Collection Gaps (§6)⚠️ PARTIALCollection gaps identified in intelligence-assessment.md; no Lagrådet access
Objectively Presented (§7)✅ PASSEvidence citations appear in all four SWOT quadrants; no obvious political lean
No Political Influence (§8)✅ PASSNo government or opposition party commissioning this analysis
Properly Coordinated (§9)N/ASingle-analyst run; no multi-analyst coordination protocol applicable
Independent of Policy (§10)✅ PASSRecommendations describe outcomes; no advocacy for specific legislative choice

Overall ICD 203 Score: 9/10 (§9 not applicable in single-analyst AI workflow context)

Identified Methodological Weaknesses

Weakness 1: Limited Primary-Source Breadth

Only 1 document found for 2026-04-28 (1-day lookback to 2026-04-27). The analysis is based on a single motion (HD024099) and the related proposition (HD03217). If additional opposition motions were filed on the same proposition by other parties (V, MP, C, L), they were not downloaded and therefore not analysed. This creates a selection bias toward S's position.

Mitigation: Conducted additional MCP search for prop. 2025/26:217 to identify related motions; found only HD024099 as the motion filed within the lookback window. Wider timeframe search recommended in next pass.

Improvement: Extend lookback to 7 days for motions submitted "med anledning av" a proposition; propositions can be tabled up to 30 days after publication.

Weakness 2: Comparative Evidence Quality

Comparative evidence for Norway, Finland and Denmark is assessed at C2-C3 (academic knowledge with limited direct primary-source access). Norwegian and Finnish prosecution statistics cited are estimated ranges (5-10 per decade for Norway) without direct primary-source citation from the respective national prosecution authorities.

Improvement: In a production workflow, retrieve Norges Riksadvokat and Finnish Valtakunnansyyttäjä annual reports for actual prosecution counts. For this 45-minute workflow, comparative estimates are sufficient for directional conclusions.

Weakness 3: No Structured Elicitation of Stakeholder Views

Stakeholder perspectives in stakeholder-perspectives.md are inferred from public positions (SKR press releases, TCO/LO remiss responses summarised in HD03217 background) rather than directly elicited. This creates risk that stakeholder positions are mischaracterised.

Improvement: In a production workflow with more time, retrieve latest SKR and LO statements from regeringen.se remiss register to verify positions. The analysis correctly flags this gap in data-download-manifest.md.

Data Download Manifest

Workflow: news-motions

Effective Date: 2026-04-27 (1-day lookback — zero motions filed on 2026-04-28)
Lookback: 1 business day
Data Sources: get_motioner, get_dokument_innehall
Documents Downloaded: 50 (all motions 2025/26 endpoint)
Documents Selected (date-filtered): 1

Produced By: download-parliamentary-data script v2 + AI analysis

MCP Server Availability

ServerStatusNotes
riksdag-regering✅ Liveget_sync_status confirmed 2026-04-28T07:36:42Z
scb✅ AvailableNot queried for this article type
world-bank✅ AvailableNot queried for this article type

Per-Document Table

dok_idTitleTypeCommitteeDatumRetrieval UTCFull-Text Status
HD024099med anledning av prop. 2025/26:217 Ett utökat straffrättsligt tjänstemannaansvarmot (Kommittémotion)JuU2026-04-272026-04-28T07:37Zmetadata-only (HTML embedded in fullContent field)

Full-Text Fetch Outcomes

<full-text-fallback: HTML full text embedded in fullContent JSON field; structural text extracted via HTML stripping>

dok_idfull_text_available
HD024099true

Document Summaries

HD024099 — Motion 2025/26:4099 (S)

Authors: Teresa Carvalho m.fl. (S)
In response to: Proposition prop. 2025/26:217 — "Ett utökat straffrättsligt tjänstemannaansvar"
Committee: Justitieutskottet (JuU)
Filed: 2026-04-27
Core demands:

  1. Reject the new crime "missbruk av offentlig ställning" and "grovt missbruk av offentlig ställning"
  2. If passed anyway, add a "compelling social interest" exemption valve
  3. Government should return with broader corruption reform proposals from the parliamentary Corruption Investigation Committee (Chapter 10 BrB)

S party argument: Government's proposal will not achieve its stated goal of protecting public trust; risks chilling effect on civil servants; misses the deeper corruption reform agenda.

Cross-Source Enrichment

  • Statskontoret: Relevant for public-sector governance capacity. Statskontoret has published reports on civil servant accountability and administrative quality in Sweden — searched via public web. See implementation-feasibility.md.
  • IMF/World Bank: No direct economic indicator relevance for criminal law reform.
  • Related Proposition: HD03217 (prop. 2025/26:217) filed 2026-04-09 by Justitiedepartementet under Justice Minister Gunnar Strömmer (M).

Article Sources

Each section above projects one analysis artifact. The full audited markdown is available on GitHub:

Analysis sources

This article is rendered 100% from the analysis artifacts below. Every section of the prose above is traceable to one of these source files on GitHub.