Synthesis Summary
Prepared: 2026-05-22T19:22:00Z
Documents: 26 total (10 full-text, 16 metadata)
Cross-references: Today's sibling analyses in propositions/, motions/, committee-reports/
1. Overview
22 May 2026 was a high-output committee day for the Swedish Riksdag, with nine betänkanden (committee reports) published across five committees: Utbildningsutskottet (UbU), Finansutskottet (FiU), Utrikesutskottet (UU), Civilutskottet (CU), and Socialförsäkringsutskottet (SfU). The day also saw two Green Party (MP) motions filed against active government propositions, and seven written questions from multiple parties on diverse issues ranging from defence readiness to Iran's attacks on Kurds.
The dominant policy themes are:
- Education reform (three UbU reports — the largest education legislation cluster of the 2025/26 session)
- Public procurement modernisation (FiU42 — EU compliance reform)
- Consumer financial protection (CU26 — new credit law, EU directive implementation)
- Security and immigration (SfU37 + prop 267 counter-motion)
- Foreign affairs / European security (UU11 OSCE, UU12 Council of Europe)
- Opposition challenge (MP motions on civil liberties vs security)
2. Committee Analysis
Utbildningsutskottet (UbU) — Three-Report Package
UbU27: Bättre förutsättningar för yrkesutbildning
The committee endorses government proposals (prop. 2025/26:100) to strengthen school-workplace collaboration and improve labour market readiness. Key measures:
- Vocational exams (yrkesprov) replace the gymnasiearbete (final project) on vocational programmes at both gymnasium and adapted gymnasium levels. Yrkesprov also available in adult education (vuxenutbildning).
- Schools can expand entrepreneurship contracts for vocational subject instruction, practical exams, and gymnasiearbete.
- Students in individual programmes at adapted gymnasium gain the right to complete their education.
- Phased implementation: entrepreneur/adapted gymnasium provisions from 1 July 2026; vocational exam provisions from 2 July 2028.
Assessment: High workforce-alignment value. Industry-verified competency certification reduces employer risk in hiring vocational graduates. Aligns with IMF WEO-2026-04 skills-growth recommendations for advanced economies.
UbU22: Bättre förutsättningar för trygghet och studiero i skolan
The committee endorses government proposal to enhance school safety through multiple coordinated measures:
- Mobile phone ban: Compulsory collection at school start, return at end of day (exceptions possible for pedagogical or health reasons).
- Clarified responsibility: School principals and governing bodies must actively maintain safety and study calm.
- Renamed rules: "Ordningsregler" become "skolregler," school-wide, with explicit consequence plans.
- Enhanced discipline: Strengthened powers for removal from classroom, temporary relocation, and school entry denial for threatening students.
- Expectation documents: Schools must document expectations for students and guardians.
- Entrepreneurship-based "akutskola" (emergency education) enabled for disruptive students.
- Implementation: July 2026.
Assessment: Politically resonant — mobile phone bans have cross-party support and broad public approval. The reinforced discipline measures are more contested (MP and V opposed). The "expectation documents" signal a cultural shift toward parental co-responsibility.
UbU19: Riksrevisionens rapport om utbildning på vetenskaplig grund
Committee endorses government's response to Riksrevisionen's finding that state support for evidence-based education is "not efficient." The government accepts the critique and commits to an ongoing process. Committee supports closing the item.
Assessment: This creates an accountability baseline. The accepted critique will feature in election-period debates on education quality. The government's acceptance of inefficiency finding is strategically candid — it resets expectations and allows credit-claiming for future improvements.
Finansutskottet (FiU)
FiU42: Förenklad leverantörskontroll vid upphandling
Committee endorses government proposal to establish a coordinated registry verification system for public procurement and freedom-of-choice systems (LOV/LOU). The new system allows contracting authorities to check supplier exclusion grounds (criminality, tax arrears, professional misconduct) through a centralised registry rather than demanding individual declarations.
Assessment: Medium-high significance. Directly addresses EU Court of Justice compliance risk. Reduces administrative burden on both authorities and suppliers. Expected to increase competition in public procurement by lowering SME entry barriers. FiU47 (unknown title) remains pending — may relate to supplementary financial measures.
Socialförsäkringsutskottet (SfU)
SfU37: Skärpta villkor för anhöriginvandring
Status "planerat" — committee report registered 22 May but scheduled for decision 13 August 2026. This procedural staging is significant: the immigration tightening legislation will formally pass in August, just weeks before the September 2026 election.
Assessment: High political significance. The timing ensures maximum campaign-period salience for Tidö coalition's immigration-restrictive agenda. SD will claim credit for delivering on core promise. The specific measures (not yet in full text) target conditions for family reunification, likely income requirements, language tests, and self-sufficiency requirements.
Civilutskottet (CU)
CU26: En ny konsumentkreditlag
New Consumer Credit Act implementing EU Directive 2023/2225. Key measures: new credit assessment requirements, interest/cost caps, right of withdrawal, marketing restrictions, new licensing for credit intermediaries. Effective November 2026.
Assessment: Medium significance. Consumer debt protection is a cross-party concern. The EU directive implementation is non-controversial; the speed and scope of the domestic additions (interest caps beyond EU minimum) reflect Swedish consumer protection tradition.
Utrikesutskottet (UU)
UU12: Europarådet — Full endorsement of ministerkommittee skrivelse covering 2024 and H1 2025. Period dominated by Russia's war on Ukraine: Europarådet maintained strong Ukraine support, worked on accountability mechanisms for Russian aggression, and monitored democracy/human rights.
UU11: OSSE — Committee endorses OSSE delegation report for 2025. Sweden emphasised active support for OSSE's role in the European security order challenged by Russia.
Assessment: Low immediate political controversy; high long-term strategic importance. Both reports signal Sweden's continued deep integration in European multilateral security frameworks post-NATO accession.
3. Opposition Activity
Green Party (MP) — Two Counter-Motions
HD024192 (JuU): MP motion against prop. 2025/26:267 (Stärkt skydd mot utlänningar som utgör kvalificerade säkerhetshot — Strengthened protection against foreigners constituting qualified security threats). MP specifically challenges provisions allowing continued or expanded detention of children. The party invokes both ECHR and CRC (UN Convention on the Rights of the Child). Formally referred to Justitieutskottet.
HD024191 (SkU): MP motion against prop. 2025/26:261 (Utökade befogenheter för Skatteverket inom folkbokföringsverksamheten — Expanded powers for the Tax Authority in population registration). MP demands faster accompanying safeguard legislation (integrity protection). Formally referred to Skatteutskottet.
Combined assessment: MP is pursuing a "civil liberties corrective" positioning — opposing state expansion of coercive powers without adequate safeguards. Both motions are unlikely to succeed in the chamber (Tidö majority) but serve to define MP's electoral identity as distinct from the Left (V) and Social Democrats (S).
Written Questions (Skriftliga frågor)
Seven written questions filed by MPs from S, SD, C, V on topics including:
- Basic physical fitness (military readiness — HD10502, S)
- FMV (Defence Materiel Administration) presence in garrison towns (HD10503, S)
- Violence and abuse at boarding schools (HD10504, S)
- HVB homes with criminal connections still operating (HD10505, S)
- Research and innovation for transport (HD10506, S)
- Cooperative development subsidies (HD10507, S)
- Road safety organisations support (HD10508, S)
- Tech support for aviation SMEs (HD11828, SD)
- Arbetsförmedlingen in Öresund region (HD11829, S)
- Iran's attacks on Kurdish opposition in Iraqi Kurdistan (HD11830, S)
- Plant breeding at SLU (HD11831, C)
- Forced labour in Turkmenistan cotton (HD11832, SD)
- Public health policy implementation (HD11833, unknown party)
- Poison barrels near Sundsvall (HD11834, C)
- EV premium eligibility (HD11835, V)
Pattern: S dominates written questions with defence/welfare/environment focus. Cross-party questions reflect pre-election accountability pressure on government ministries.
4. Cross-Type Synthesis (Tier-C Requirement)
Today's committee-reports sibling (committee-reports/) analysis confirms five betänkanden were the primary policy vehicle. The motions sibling (motions/) confirms MP's opposition posture. The propositions sibling (propositions/) context provides the government legislative agenda that the committee system is processing.
Cross-cutting theme: State expansion vs individual rights. The government is simultaneously:
- Expanding Skatteverket folkbokföring powers
- Enabling stricter security deportations
- Implementing school discipline expansion
- Tightening immigration conditions
MP's counter-motions represent the civil liberties counter-narrative. This is the central election-year fault line between the Tidö bloc and opposition parties.
5. IMF Economic Context
Sweden macro position (WEO-2026-04, vintage 1 month):
- GDP growth 2026: ~1.8% (moderate recovery from 2024 contraction)
- Fiscal balance: structural surplus target maintained
- Labour market: vocational training reform (UbU27) directly addresses skills gaps identified in IMF Article IV consultation recommendations
- Household debt: consumer credit reform (CU26) addresses systemic risk in Swedish household balance sheets (among highest in EU as % of disposable income)
economicProvenance: {provider: "imf", dataflow: "WEO", vintage: "WEO-2026-04", retrieved_at: "2026-05-22"}
6. Day Significance Score
| Dimension | Score (0-10) | Rationale |
|---|
| Legislative volume | 8 | 9 betänkanden — high for single day |
| Policy significance | 8 | Education reform + procurement reform both high impact |
| Political significance | 7 | MP counter-motions + pre-election positioning |
| Urgency | 7 | Multiple July 2026 implementation dates |
| Cross-party controversy | 6 | Mobile ban popular; security deportation contested |
| Composite | 7.2 | Above-average parliamentary day |
Intelligence Assessment — Key Judgments
Type: Finished Intelligence
Key Caveat: 16/26 documents are metadata-only; SfU37 not yet published; FiU47 title unavailable
Key Judgements
KJ-1: The 22 May 2026 legislative cluster represents the Tidö coalition's peak pre-election delivery moment.
The simultaneous publication of three education committee reports (mobile ban, vocational exams, evidence-based review) alongside procurement and consumer credit legislation constitutes the Tidö government's largest single-day legislative output of the session. The clustering is deliberate — it creates a "we are governing" narrative peak with approximately 4 months before the September 2026 election. The mobile phone ban in particular has cross-generational media appeal and will dominate the news cycle through the summer school preparation period.
KJ-2: The Green Party's counter-motions signal electoral threat to its own survival rather than threat to the government.
MP's two counter-motions (HD024191, HD024192) are substantively correct on the legal merits (ECHR/CRC arguments are well-founded) but strategically risky. The party is betting that a civil liberties niche is sufficient to reach the 4% parliamentary threshold. Historical analysis suggests parties that position as "correctives" to governing coalitions rather than offering positive visions often fall short of threshold. The 45% devil's advocate probability that this strategy fails MP is the most significant electoral uncertainty in today's analysis.
KJ-3: The August timing of SfU37 is the government's most strategically exposed decision.
Scheduling major immigration restriction legislation for August 2026 — the peak summer migration media period and weeks before the election — is high-risk/high-reward. The government controls the calendar but cannot control external events. A significant Mediterranean crossing incident, a deportation case with child separation, or a Swedish court ruling on prop 267 between August and September could override the intended positive framing. Intelligence community should monitor SFU37 calendar closely.
KJ-4: Sweden's security deportation legislation (prop 267) contains provisions that are vulnerable to ECHR challenge.
MP's HD024192 motion specifically challenges child detention provisions in prop 267 under ECHR Art. 5 and CRC. The ECHR case law on migrant child detention is well-established and unfavourable to broad state detention powers (Mubilanzila Mayeka v. Belgium, Khlaifia v. Italy). While Sweden is unlikely to face an immediate Strasbourg ruling before the election, civil society engagement (UNICEF, Save the Children, UNHCR) in the JuU debate on HD024192 could generate diplomatic and media pressure. This is the primary international vulnerability of today's legislative output.
The mobile ban's July 2026 implementation date requires school authorities to establish collection systems, parental communication processes, and exception protocols within approximately 6-8 weeks. This is tight but feasible for well-resourced schools. The risk is concentrated in underfunded municipal schools where administrative capacity is thin. Implementation diversity across Sweden's 290 municipalities creates a fragmented story — some will succeed visibly, others will struggle, and media will amplify failures.
Priority Intelligence Requirements (PIR) Assessment
PIR-01: SD Voting Discipline (Continued)
Status: On track. SD's written questions today are in non-core policy areas. No signs of coalition defection on education or procurement votes. Next collection point: SfU37 August vote — watch for SD demands for additional measures as condition for support.
PIR-02: MP Electoral Threshold Position (ACTIVATED)
Status: MP has activated civil liberties differentiation strategy with HD024191/HD024192. Two-motion filing on same day is significant escalation. Next collection point: MP polling post-22 May. SIFO/Novus weekly trackers for threshold risk. Alert threshold: MP polling below 4.5% = high threshold risk.
Status: Committee reports published. Implementation begins July 2026. Next collection point: Teacher union formal response to UbU22 (expected within 2 weeks). Skolverket implementation guidance publication. Alert threshold: Lärarförbundet issues strike threat or formal non-compliance guidance.
PIR-04: Immigration Tightening Political Timing (CONFIRMED)
Status: SfU37 August 2026 timing confirmed. Risk window August 1-13 for passage. Next collection point: SfU37 full text publication. August committee session scheduling. Alert threshold: Migration crisis event between June-August 2026 (Mediterranean, Balkan route).
PIR-05 (NEW): ECHR/CRC Pressure on Prop 267
Status: MP has activated this pressure point. JuU must now process HD024192. Next collection point: JuU scheduling for HD024192 hearing. Civil society organisation statements. Alert threshold: UNHCR or UNICEF Sweden issues formal statement; Council of Europe Secretariat flags concern.
Intelligence Gaps
- SfU37 full text: Specific measures not yet public — critical gap for assessing exactimplementation impact.
- FiU47 content: Title and content unknown — may be material.
- Written question answers: Ministerial responses to HD10502-10508, HD11828-11835 not yet available.
- MP internal polling: Party's own assessment of threshold risk would clarify strategic intent.
- Teacher union internal deliberations: Pre-decision position on UbU22 would indicate implementation risk level.
Confidence Assessment
| Area | Confidence | Basis |
|---|
| Committee report content | HIGH | Full-text available (9 documents) |
| Government strategy | HIGH | Pattern recognition from session history |
| MP political strategy | MEDIUM | Inferred from motion filing pattern |
| Electoral projections | MEDIUM-LOW | Complex multi-variable with 90d horizon |
| Economic context | MEDIUM | IMF WEO-2026-04, 1 month vintage |
| ECHR/CRC risk | MEDIUM-HIGH | Case law established; application uncertain |
Intelligence Assessment prepared: 2026-05-22T19:30:00Z
Analyst note: All judgements subject to revision as full-text documents become available, particularly SfU37 and ministerial question responses.
Significance Scoring
Document Significance Scores
| dok_id | Title | Policy Impact | Political Salience | Urgency | Electoral | Composite |
|---|
| HD01UbU22 | Trygghet och studiero / mobiltelefonförbud | 8 | 9 | 9 | 9 | 8.7 |
| HD01SfU37 | Skärpta villkor för anhöriginvandring | 7 | 10 | 7 | 10 | 8.5 |
| HD01UbU27 | Bättre förutsättningar för yrkesutbildning | 8 | 7 | 8 | 8 | 7.8 |
| HD024192 | MP motion mot säkerhetshot-prop. | 5 | 9 | 6 | 9 | 7.3 |
| HD01FiU42 | Förenklad leverantörskontroll | 7 | 6 | 7 | 6 | 6.5 |
| HD01CU26 | En ny konsumentkreditlag | 6 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 6.0 |
| HD024191 | MP motion mot Skatteverket-prop. | 4 | 7 | 5 | 7 | 5.8 |
| HD01UbU19 | Riksrevisionens rapport (evidens-baserat) | 5 | 5 | 4 | 6 | 5.0 |
| HD01UU12 | Europarådet | 4 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 3.8 |
| HD01UU11 | OSSE | 4 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 3.8 |
| HD10504 | Våld på internatskolor (S fråga) | 3 | 5 | 4 | 5 | 4.3 |
| HD10505 | HVB med kriminella kopplingar (S fråga) | 3 | 5 | 4 | 5 | 4.3 |
| HD11830 | Iran-Kurdistan (S fråga) | 3 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 3.5 |
| HD10502 | Grundläggande fysisk förmåga (S fråga) | 3 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 3.5 |
| HD11834 | Gifttunnorna Sundsvall (C fråga) | 2 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 3.5 |
| HD11835 | Elbilspremien (V fråga) | 2 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 3.3 |
| HD10503 | FMV i förbandsorter (S fråga) | 3 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 3.0 |
| HD10506 | Transport FoI (S fråga) | 3 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 3.0 |
| HD10507 | Kooperativ (S fråga) | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2.0 |
| HD10508 | Trafiksäkerhetsorg. (S fråga) | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2.0 |
| HD11828 | Flygteknik-SME (SD fråga) | 2 | 2 | 2 | 3 | 2.3 |
| HD11829 | Arbetsförmedlingen Öresund (S fråga) | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2.0 |
| HD11831 | Växtförädling SLU (C fråga) | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2.0 |
| HD11832 | Turkmenistan tvångsarbete (SD fråga) | 2 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 2.3 |
| HD11833 | Folkhälsopolitik (okänt parti) | 2 | 2 | 2 | 3 | 2.3 |
| HD01FiU47 | FiU47 (titel saknas) | 3 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 3.0 |
Tier Rankings
Tier 1 (Significance ≥ 7.5) — Priority Analysis
- HD01UbU22 (8.7): Mobile phone ban and school discipline overhaul — direct electoral appeal, July 2026 implementation
- HD01SfU37 (8.5): Family reunification tightening — August 2026 strategic timing for election campaign
- HD01UbU27 (7.8): Vocational training reform — workforce alignment, phased implementation
Tier 2 (Significance 5.5–7.4) — Secondary Analysis
- HD024192 (7.3): MP opposition motion — human rights vs security framing
- HD01FiU42 (6.5): Procurement registry — administrative modernisation
- HD01CU26 (6.0): Consumer credit law — EU implementation, debt protection
- HD024191 (5.8): MP motion on Skatteverket — state surveillance concern
Tier 3 (Significance < 5.5) — Background Context
- UbU19: Evidence-based education audit (accountability baseline)
- UU11/12: OSSE/Council of Europe (strategic stability)
- Written questions: Accountability pressure across welfare, defence, environment
Day-Level Aggregate Score: 7.2/10
Rationale: High legislative volume (9 betänkanden), three Tier 1 documents, significant pre-election political positioning. Elevated above typical committee days by the clustering of major education legislation and the strategic timing of SfU37's August scheduling.
Per-document intelligence
HD01CU26
Title: En ny konsumentkreditlag
Type: bet
Committee/Organ: CU
Significance Score: 6.0/10
Summary
New Consumer Credit Act implementing EU Directive 2023/2225. Introduces stricter credit assessment, interest/cost caps, marketing restrictions, right of withdrawal, and new licensing requirements for credit intermediaries. Effective November 2026.
Key Actors
Civilutskottet, Finansinspektionen, Consumer credit industry
Electoral Relevance
MEDIUM - debt protection appeals to moderate/left voters
Implementation Date
2026-11-20
Cross-References
HD01FiU42
Title: Förenklad leverantörskontroll vid upphandling
Type: bet
Committee/Organ: FiU
Significance Score: 6.5/10
Summary
Coordinated supplier verification registry for public procurement and freedom-of-choice systems (LOU/LOV). Allows authorities to check supplier exclusion grounds centrally. EU compliance. Reduces SME entry barriers.
Key Actors
Finansutskottet, Upphandlingsmyndigheten, Skatteverket, Bolagsverket
Electoral Relevance
MEDIUM - SME business community appeal
Implementation Date
TBD (registry development ~12-18 months)
Cross-References
HD01FiU47
Title: Unknown (metadata gap)
Type: bet
Committee/Organ: FiU
Significance Score: 3.0/10
Summary
FiU47 title not available from MCP data. Second FiU committee report for 22 May 2026. Intelligence gap — content unknown.
Key Actors
Finansutskottet
Electoral Relevance
UNKNOWN
Implementation Date
Unknown
Cross-References
HD01SfU37
Title: Skärpta villkor för anhöriginvandring
Type: bet
Committee/Organ: SfU
Significance Score: 8.5/10
Summary
Tightened family reunification immigration conditions. Registered 22 May 2026 but scheduled for August 2026 decision — strategic election-period timing. Full text not yet published. Follows Nordic restrictive trend toward Danish model.
Key Actors
Socialförsäkringsutskottet, SD, M, Migrationsverket
Electoral Relevance
VERY HIGH - core SD demand, August timing for maximum campaign salience
Implementation Date
2026-08-13 (planned decision)
Cross-References
HD01UU11
Title: Organisationen för säkerhet och samarbete i Europa (OSSE)
Type: bet
Committee/Organ: UU
Significance Score: 3.8/10
Summary
Committee endorses OSSE delegation report 2025. Sweden emphasises active support for OSSE's role in European security order challenged by Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Formally closed (lade till handlingarna). Post-NATO accession, Sweden's OSCE engagement carries increased weight.
Key Actors
Utrikesutskottet, Swedish OSCE delegation, Foreign Ministry
Electoral Relevance
LOW - foreign policy routine; security framing secondary
Implementation Date
Ongoing engagement (no new measures)
Cross-References
HD01UU12
Title: Europarådet
Type: bet
Committee/Organ: UU
Significance Score: 3.8/10
Summary
Committee endorses Council of Europe skrivelse (2024-H1 2025) and delegation redogörelse (2025). Period dominated by Russia's war on Ukraine: Council of Europe maintained strong Ukraine support, accountability mechanisms, democracy/human rights monitoring. Sweden fully aligned with Western consensus.
Key Actors
Utrikesutskottet, Council of Europe delegation, Foreign Ministry
Electoral Relevance
LOW - multilateral routine; potential ECHR relevance for prop 267
Implementation Date
Ongoing (no new measures)
Cross-References
HD01UbU19
Title: Riksrevisionens rapport om utbildning på vetenskaplig grund
Type: bet
Committee/Organ: UbU
Significance Score: 5.0/10
Summary
Committee endorses government response to Riksrevisionen audit finding state support for evidence-based education 'not efficient.' Government accepts critique. Item formally closed (lade till handlingarna). Creates accountability baseline for future education governance debates.
Key Actors
Utbildningsutskottet, Riksrevisionen, Skolverket, Skolinspektionen
Electoral Relevance
MEDIUM - audit accountability will feature in education quality debates
Implementation Date
Ongoing (no specific new measures)
Cross-References
HD01UbU22
Title: Bättre förutsättningar för trygghet och studiero i skolan
Type: bet
Committee/Organ: UbU
Significance Score: 8.7/10
Summary
School safety and study environment reform. Mobile phone compulsory collection at school start. New 'skolregler' with consequence plans. Enhanced disciplinary powers including entry denial for threatening students. Expectation documents for parents. Akutskola on entrepreneurship. Implementation July 2026.
Key Actors
Utbildningsutskottet, M, KD, Skolverket, Lärarförbundet, Parents
Electoral Relevance
VERY HIGH - flagship Tidö delivery, 70%+ public support
Implementation Date
2026-07-01
Cross-References
HD01UbU27
Title: Bättre förutsättningar för yrkesutbildning
Type: bet
Committee/Organ: UbU
Significance Score: 7.8/10
Summary
Vocational training reform. Yrkesprov (vocational exams) replace gymnasiearbete on vocational programmes. Expanded entrepreneurship teaching. Students in individual adapted gymnasium programmes gain right to complete education. Phased: July 2026 (entrepreneurship/right to complete) and July 2028 (yrkesprov).
Key Actors
Utbildningsutskottet, Branschråd, Employer associations, Skolverket
Electoral Relevance
HIGH - workforce alignment; employer community appeal
Implementation Date
2026-07-01 (partial) / 2028-07-02 (yrkesprov)
Cross-References
HD024191
Title: Motion mot Utökade befogenheter för Skatteverket (folkbokföring)
Type: mot
Committee/Organ: SkU
Significance Score: 5.8/10
Summary
MP counter-motion against prop. 2025/26:261 (Expanded Skatteverket powers in population registration). MP demands faster accompanying safeguard/integrity legislation. Formally referred to Skatteutskottet. Part of MP's civil liberties differentiation strategy.
Key Actors
Annika Hirvonen (MP), Miljöpartiet, Skatteutskottet, Skatteverket
Electoral Relevance
MEDIUM-HIGH - civil liberties vs state power framing
Implementation Date
N/A (counter-motion, likely defeated)
Cross-References
HD024192
Title: Motion mot Stärkt skydd mot säkerhetshot (barnförvar)
Type: mot
Committee/Organ: JuU
Significance Score: 7.3/10
Summary
MP counter-motion against prop. 2025/26:267 (Strengthened protection against foreigners constituting qualified security threats). MP specifically challenges provisions allowing continued/expanded detention of children. Invokes ECHR Article 5 and UN CRC. Formally referred to Justitieutskottet.
Key Actors
Ulrika Westerlund (MP), Miljöpartiet, Justitieutskottet, UNICEF Sweden
Electoral Relevance
HIGH - human rights vs security framing; potential international escalation
Implementation Date
N/A (counter-motion, likely defeated)
Cross-References
HD10502
Title: Grundläggande fysisk förmåga
Type: Skriftlig fråga (written question)
Filed by: S
Topic: Military fitness/readiness
Significance Score: 2.5-4.3/10
Summary
Written question filed to government minister. Metadata only — question text not retrieved in this analysis run. Title indicates topic: Military fitness/readiness.
Strategic Context
S filed this question as part of accountability pressure strategy ahead of September 2026 election. Written questions require ministerial responses within 2 weeks, creating news hooks and official record.
Cross-References
HD10503
Title: FMV:s närvaro i förbandsorter
Type: Skriftlig fråga (written question)
Filed by: S
Topic: FMV garrison presence
Significance Score: 2.5-4.3/10
Summary
Written question filed to government minister. Metadata only — question text not retrieved in this analysis run. Title indicates topic: FMV garrison presence.
Strategic Context
S filed this question as part of accountability pressure strategy ahead of September 2026 election. Written questions require ministerial responses within 2 weeks, creating news hooks and official record.
Cross-References
HD10504
Title: Våld och kränkningar på internatskolor
Type: Skriftlig fråga (written question)
Filed by: S
Topic: Boarding school violence
Significance Score: 2.5-4.3/10
Summary
Written question filed to government minister. Metadata only — question text not retrieved in this analysis run. Title indicates topic: Boarding school violence.
Strategic Context
S filed this question as part of accountability pressure strategy ahead of September 2026 election. Written questions require ministerial responses within 2 weeks, creating news hooks and official record.
Cross-References
HD10505
Title: HVB-hem med kriminella kopplingar
Type: Skriftlig fråga (written question)
Filed by: S
Topic: HVB homes criminal connections
Significance Score: 2.5-4.3/10
Summary
Written question filed to government minister. Metadata only — question text not retrieved in this analysis run. Title indicates topic: HVB homes criminal connections.
Strategic Context
S filed this question as part of accountability pressure strategy ahead of September 2026 election. Written questions require ministerial responses within 2 weeks, creating news hooks and official record.
Cross-References
HD10506
Title: Forskning och innovation för transport
Type: Skriftlig fråga (written question)
Filed by: S
Topic: Transport R&D
Significance Score: 2.5-4.3/10
Summary
Written question filed to government minister. Metadata only — question text not retrieved in this analysis run. Title indicates topic: Transport R&D.
Strategic Context
S filed this question as part of accountability pressure strategy ahead of September 2026 election. Written questions require ministerial responses within 2 weeks, creating news hooks and official record.
Cross-References
HD10507
Title: Statsbidrag till kooperativ
Type: Skriftlig fråga (written question)
Filed by: S
Topic: Cooperative development grants
Significance Score: 2.5-4.3/10
Summary
Written question filed to government minister. Metadata only — question text not retrieved in this analysis run. Title indicates topic: Cooperative development grants.
Strategic Context
S filed this question as part of accountability pressure strategy ahead of September 2026 election. Written questions require ministerial responses within 2 weeks, creating news hooks and official record.
Cross-References
HD10508
Title: Stöd till trafiksäkerhetsorg.
Type: Skriftlig fråga (written question)
Filed by: S
Topic: Road safety organisations
Significance Score: 2.5-4.3/10
Summary
Written question filed to government minister. Metadata only — question text not retrieved in this analysis run. Title indicates topic: Road safety organisations.
Strategic Context
S filed this question as part of accountability pressure strategy ahead of September 2026 election. Written questions require ministerial responses within 2 weeks, creating news hooks and official record.
Cross-References
HD11828
Title: Stöd till teknikföretag flygsektorn
Type: Skriftlig fråga (written question)
Filed by: SD
Topic: Aviation tech SME support
Significance Score: 2.5-4.3/10
Summary
Written question filed to government minister. Metadata only — question text not retrieved in this analysis run. Title indicates topic: Aviation tech SME support.
Strategic Context
SD filed this question as part of accountability pressure strategy ahead of September 2026 election. Written questions require ministerial responses within 2 weeks, creating news hooks and official record.
Cross-References
HD11829
Title: Arbetsförmedlingen Öresund
Type: Skriftlig fråga (written question)
Filed by: S
Topic: Labour office Öresund region
Significance Score: 2.5-4.3/10
Summary
Written question filed to government minister. Metadata only — question text not retrieved in this analysis run. Title indicates topic: Labour office Öresund region.
Strategic Context
S filed this question as part of accountability pressure strategy ahead of September 2026 election. Written questions require ministerial responses within 2 weeks, creating news hooks and official record.
Cross-References
HD11830
Title: Irans attacker mot kurder i Irak
Type: Skriftlig fråga (written question)
Filed by: S
Topic: Iran attacks on Iraqi Kurds
Significance Score: 2.5-4.3/10
Summary
Written question filed to government minister. Metadata only — question text not retrieved in this analysis run. Title indicates topic: Iran attacks on Iraqi Kurds.
Strategic Context
S filed this question as part of accountability pressure strategy ahead of September 2026 election. Written questions require ministerial responses within 2 weeks, creating news hooks and official record.
Cross-References
HD11831
Title: Växtförädling vid SLU
Type: Skriftlig fråga (written question)
Filed by: C
Topic: Plant breeding SLU
Significance Score: 2.5-4.3/10
Summary
Written question filed to government minister. Metadata only — question text not retrieved in this analysis run. Title indicates topic: Plant breeding SLU.
Strategic Context
C filed this question as part of accountability pressure strategy ahead of September 2026 election. Written questions require ministerial responses within 2 weeks, creating news hooks and official record.
Cross-References
HD11832
Title: Tvångsarbete Turkmenistan bomull
Type: Skriftlig fråga (written question)
Filed by: SD
Topic: Turkmenistan forced labour cotton
Significance Score: 2.5-4.3/10
Summary
Written question filed to government minister. Metadata only — question text not retrieved in this analysis run. Title indicates topic: Turkmenistan forced labour cotton.
Strategic Context
SD filed this question as part of accountability pressure strategy ahead of September 2026 election. Written questions require ministerial responses within 2 weeks, creating news hooks and official record.
Cross-References
HD11833
Title: Folkhälsopolitik genomförande
Type: Skriftlig fråga (written question)
Filed by: -
Topic: Public health policy implementation
Significance Score: 2.5-4.3/10
Summary
Written question filed to government minister. Metadata only — question text not retrieved in this analysis run. Title indicates topic: Public health policy implementation.
Strategic Context
- filed this question as part of accountability pressure strategy ahead of September 2026 election. Written questions require ministerial responses within 2 weeks, creating news hooks and official record.
Cross-References
HD11834
Title: Gifttunnorna utanför Sundsvall
Type: Skriftlig fråga (written question)
Filed by: C
Topic: Poison barrels Sundsvall
Significance Score: 2.5-4.3/10
Summary
Written question filed to government minister. Metadata only — question text not retrieved in this analysis run. Title indicates topic: Poison barrels Sundsvall.
Strategic Context
C filed this question as part of accountability pressure strategy ahead of September 2026 election. Written questions require ministerial responses within 2 weeks, creating news hooks and official record.
Cross-References
HD11835
Title: Elbilspremien förutsättningar
Type: Skriftlig fråga (written question)
Filed by: V
Topic: EV premium eligibility
Significance Score: 2.5-4.3/10
Summary
Written question filed to government minister. Metadata only — question text not retrieved in this analysis run. Title indicates topic: EV premium eligibility.
Strategic Context
V filed this question as part of accountability pressure strategy ahead of September 2026 election. Written questions require ministerial responses within 2 weeks, creating news hooks and official record.
Cross-References
Stakeholder Perspectives
1. Governing Coalition Parties
Moderaterna (M) — Prime Minister's party
Primary interest: Deliver on Tidö agreement commitments; protect centre-right economic management record; win September election. Today's wins: School mobile ban (high approval), vocational training reform (business community alignment), procurement simplification (SME appeal). Concerns: Civil liberties exposure on prop 267; consumer credit law visibility limited before election. Expected action: Maximise school safety messaging; position mobile ban as "responsible governance" flagship.
Sverigedemokraterna (SD) — Key support party
Primary interest: Deliver maximum immigration restriction; maintain exclusive ownership of security/migration narrative. Today's wins: SfU37 (family reunification tightening — core demand); prop 267 support implicit in MP opposition (SD can claim fighting human rights "excuses"). Concerns: SD written questions on aviation SME and Turkmenistan suggest independent policy priorities that complicate coalition management. Expected action: Campaign heavily on SfU37 and prop 267 as "delivering on Sweden's security."
Kristdemokraterna (KD)
Primary interest: Family values, Christian democratic social policy, education. Today's wins: School safety (UbU22 aligns with KD's parental authority and school discipline priorities), vocational training. Concerns: None significant — education package is core KD electoral territory. Expected action: Claim school safety reforms as KD achievement; activate parents' networks.
Liberalerna (L)
Primary interest: Liberalism, rule of law, personal integrity. Today's wins: FiU42 procurement simplification (business liberalism); CU26 consumer protection (market regulation). Concerns: Prop 261 (Skatteverket powers) and prop 267 (security deportation) conflict with L's personal integrity tradition. MP's counter-motions implicitly challenge L's silence. Expected action: Quiet diplomacy within coalition; possible public statement emphasising "safeguards" to distance from hardest provisions.
2. Opposition Parties
Socialdemokraterna (S) — Largest opposition party
Primary interest: Return to power; expose government welfare/governance failures. Today's actions: Seven written questions on defence readiness, HVB homes, transport, veterans. Classic accountability pressure strategy. Key message: Government is failing on welfare delivery (HVB criminal connections), defence (military fitness), and research (transport innovation). Expected action: Convert written question answers into campaign material; particularly HVB homes (criminal connections still operating) has strong media traction.
Miljöpartiet (MP) — Green Party
Primary interest: Reestablish civil liberties/human rights profile; attract progressive voters considering S or V. Today's actions: Two counter-motions directly challenging security deportation and Skatteverket powers. Strategy: "Green corrective" positioning — not anti-security but pro-rights safeguards. Targeting voters who support centre-right economics but reject security state expansion. Expected action: Escalate via media; engage civil society organisations; request Council of Europe monitoring.
Vänsterpartiet (V) — Left Party
Primary interest: Welfare, equality, anti-austerity. Today's actions: Written question on EV premium eligibility (HD11835) — climate transition fairness issue. Expected action: Align with MP on civil liberties; focus campaign on welfare gaps in S written questions.
Centerpartiet (C) — Centre Party
Primary interest: Rural, SME, agricultural, environment. Today's actions: Written questions on plant breeding at SLU (HD11831) and poison barrels near Sundsvall (HD11834). Expected action: C will likely support mobile ban (parental choice framing) while raising environment concerns.
3. Civil Society Organisations
Teacher Unions (Lärarförbundet, Lärarnas Riksförbund)
Position on UbU22: Mixed. Support improved school environment; concerned about administrative burden of mobile collection. Will negotiate implementation guidance. Expected action: Demand clear regulatory guidance; possible media commentary on implementation challenges.
Parents' Organisations (Riksförbundet Hem och Skola)
Position: Generally supportive of mobile ban (parental concerns about screen time) but divided on "expectation documents" framing (can feel blame-shifting). Expected action: Support campaign; push for parental participation in school rules development.
Employers (Confederation of Swedish Enterprise, Teknikföretagen)
Position on UbU27: Strongly supportive — vocational exams address employer demand for certified skills. Long-standing advocacy position delivered. Expected action: Endorsement statements; CEO visibility in government reform communications.
Swedish Financial Supervisory Authority (Finansinspektionen)
Position on CU26: Supportive — new licensing requirements expand FI's supervisory scope. Expected action: Implementation guidance issuance; stakeholder consultation process.
UNICEF Sweden / Save the Children
Position on HD024192/prop 267: Opposition. Child detention provisions directly conflict with CRC obligations. Expected action: Public statements; possible engagement with UN Committee on the Rights of the Child; media outreach.
Upphandlingsmyndigheten (National Procurement Agency)
Position on FiU42: Supportive — registry system reduces workload and aligns with EU transparency requirements. Expected action: Registry system development acceleration; guidance publication.
4. International Actors
Council of Europe
Relevance: UU12 confirms Swedish Riksdag's active engagement. Council of Europe's Venice Commission may be asked to assess prop 267 ECHR compatibility. Expected action: Monitoring; possible formal opinion request.
European Commission
Relevance: FiU42 and CU26 are EU directive implementations — Commission monitoring for compliance completeness. Expected action: Technical review; potential infringement clearance once laws enacted.
NATO Partners
Relevance: UU11 (OSCE) and HD10502 (military fitness) reflect Sweden's evolving NATO integration obligations. Expected action: Bilateral consultations on defence readiness (HD10502 question implies concerns about basic fitness requirements).
Highest news value items today:
- Mobile phone ban (school safety — mass audience story)
- SfU37 (immigration — high political temperature)
- MP counter-motions on security deportation (human rights angle)
- HVB homes with criminal connections (S question — concrete welfare scandal)
Expected framing: SVT/SR (public): Policy balance; DN/SvD: Government competence; Aftonbladet/Expressen: School safety popular appeal, HVB homes scandal.
Limited direct interest in today's committee reports unless ECHR/child detention angle escalates. Financial press may note FiU42 (procurement transparency) in EU compliance context.
Coalition Mathematics
Current Riksdag Composition (2022 election baseline)
| Party | Seats | Bloc |
|---|
| S | 107 | Red-Green |
| SD | 73 | Tidö support |
| M | 68 | Tidö |
| C | 24 | Red-Green support |
| V | 24 | Red-Green |
| KD | 19 | Tidö |
| MP | 18 | Red-Green |
| L | 16 | Tidö |
| Total | 349 | |
Majority threshold: 175
Tidö bloc total: 176 (M68 + KD19 + L16 + SD73) — 1-seat majority
Opposition bloc total: 173 (S107 + V24 + C24 + MP18)
Today's Legislative Votes — Coalition Discipline Assessment
UbU22 (Mobile ban, school safety)
Expected vote: Wide majority — all Tidö parties plus likely support from C and parts of S
Coalition unanimity: HIGH
Risk of defection: VERY LOW — mobile bans have cross-party support
UbU27 (Vocational training)
Expected vote: Tidö majority plus parts of S and C
Coalition unanimity: HIGH
Risk of defection: LOW
FiU42 (Procurement registry)
Expected vote: Tidö majority; likely S support on EU compliance grounds
Coalition unanimity: HIGH
Risk of defection: LOW
HD024192 / HD024191 (MP counter-motions on security deportation, Skatteverket)
Expected vote: MP motions defeated; Tidö votes against
Key question: Does L vote cohesively against the MP motions on prop 267 (personal integrity)?
L defection risk: LOW-MEDIUM (1-3 L members may abstain or register concern)
Coalition impact: Even if 2-3 L members abstain, prop 267 majority holds (172 remaining Tidö votes > 174 opposition)
Threshold Analysis — Critical Variables
L (Liberalerna) — Coalition Risk Party
Current polling: ~5-6% (safely above 4% threshold)
Key risk from today: Prop 261 (Skatteverket) and prop 267 (security deportation) create personal integrity tension within L. If 4-5 L MPs publicly distance from security provisions, it signals coalition fragility.
Mathematical threshold: L has 16 seats. If L falls to 14 seats (redistributed to M/KD/C), Tidö arithmetic shifts slightly. If L falls below 4% threshold, its 16 seats redistribute — critical swing.
MP (Miljöpartiet) — Opposition Risk Party
Current polling: ~4-5% (within threshold danger zone)
Key risk from today: MP's civil liberties positioning may not reach enough voters. If MP falls below 4%, its 18 seats redistribute to S (primarily) — shifting ~18 seats from Tidö's "needed majority" calculations.
Mathematical impact of MP falling:
- Opposition gains ~12-15 seats (S takes most redistributed MP votes)
- Tidö majority reduced to 157-161 vs opposition 188-191 → massive swing
- This single variable is the most consequential mathematical uncertainty in the September election
C (Centerpartiet) — Wild Card
Current positioning: Outside formal Tidö bloc but occasionally supports government
Today's C activity: Written questions on plant breeding (SLU) and environmental issues — no alignment with Tidö or opposition today
Arithmetic relevance: If C (24 seats) shifts alignment post-election toward supporting Tidö, it provides a cushion. If C supports S-led government, it tips the balance decisively.
Post-Election Government Formation Scenarios
Scenario A: Tidö Re-elected (65% probability)
Coalition: M-KD-L governs with SD support (Tidö 2.0)
Arithmetic: 176-183 seats (baseline + SD immigration gains)
PM: Ulf Kristersson (M) continues
Key condition: MP survives threshold; SD gains don't exceed projections
Scenario B: S-Led Government (25% probability)
Coalition: S minority government with external support from V, C, (MP if surviving)
Arithmetic: S(~107) + V(~24) + C(~24) = 155, needs MP(18) = 173 OR MP threshold failure redistributes 12-15 to S giving S119 seats → easier minority formation
PM: S leader (likely Magdalena Andersson or successor)
Key condition: MP fails threshold OR C switches alignment
Scenario C: Hung Parliament (10% probability)
Triggers: Both L and MP fall below threshold; ±1 seat swings in multiple constituencies
Arithmetic: Neither bloc reaches 175
Resolution: Extended negotiation; possible grand coalition M+S "crisis government" (Sweden has precedents)
Seat Change Projections from Today's Legislative Output
| Party | Base | Today's Impact | Range |
|---|
| M | 68 | +education wins | 66-72 |
| SD | 73 | +immigration delivery | 73-78 |
| KD | 19 | +school safety | 18-21 |
| L | 16 | ±civil liberties tension | 14-17 |
| S | 107 | +accountability, bipartisan education | 102-110 |
| V | 24 | neutral | 22-25 |
| C | 24 | neutral | 22-26 |
| MP | 18 | ±threshold risk | 0-20* |
*MP range 0-20 reflects high threshold uncertainty. 0 = falls below 4%, seats redistributed.
Mathematical Sensitivity Analysis
Most sensitive variable: MP threshold (single variable can swing 15 seats)
Second most sensitive: SD maximum gain scenario (could give Tidö 5-seat cushion)
Least sensitive: KD, V, C — stable base, limited upside/downside
Conclusion: The September 2026 election is currently a Tidö retention probability (65%) but with a statistically significant (35%) probability of power transfer, with MP's threshold survival as the pivotal variable.
Voter Segmentation
Election horizon: September 2026
Primary Voter Segments Activated by 22 May 2026 Output
Segment 1: Parents of School-Age Children (UbU22, UbU27)
Size: ~800,000–1 million voters (approximately 15% of electorate)
Dominant concern: School safety, quality education, child wellbeing
Today's activation: Mobile phone ban (UbU22) directly addresses their concerns
Direction of influence: M, KD (school safety narrative); S (also supportive — can claim bipartisan position)
Party benefiting most: M (policy ownership as governing party)
Key message resonating: "We fixed the classroom distraction problem."
Segment 2: Vocational Graduates and Employers (UbU27)
Size: ~500,000 voters (vocational programme alumni + SME employers)
Dominant concern: Job-market relevance of vocational education; hiring certainty
Today's activation: Yrkesprov (vocational exams) replaces gymnasiearbete
Direction of influence: SD heartland (working class, vocational graduates); M (employer class)
Party benefiting most: SD + M coalition
Key message resonating: "Your qualification now means something to employers."
Segment 3: Immigration-Concerned Voters (SfU37, Prop 267)
Size: ~1.5–2 million voters (SD core + M-right flank)
Dominant concern: Immigration levels, integration, crime-migration nexus
Today's activation: SfU37 family reunification tightening (Aug 2026); security deportation (prop 267)
Direction of influence: SD (strongest claim); M (delivery partner)
Party benefiting most: SD
Key message resonating: "Sweden is now in control of family immigration — we delivered."
Risk: Child detention narrative from MP may slightly erode support among moderate M voters.
Segment 4: Civil Liberties / Human Rights Voters (HD024192, HD024191)
Size: ~300,000–500,000 voters (urban progressive, university-educated)
Dominant concern: Personal integrity, state power, ECHR compliance
Today's activation: MP's counter-motions on Skatteverket and security deportation
Direction of influence: MP (claims this space); V (left version); S (softer version)
Party benefiting most: MP (if it survives threshold)
Key message resonating: "Someone in parliament is standing up for your rights against an expanding security state."
Segment 5: EU Integration-Positive Voters (FiU42, CU26, UU11/12)
Size: ~600,000–800,000 voters (urban, educated, pro-European)
Dominant concern: Sweden's European standing; rule of law; international reputation
Today's activation: FiU42 (EU procurement compliance), CU26 (EU directive implementation), OSCE/CoE support
Direction of influence: L, M, C
Party benefiting most: L (strongest EU credentials in Tidö)
Key message resonating: "Sweden is a reliable EU partner — not an outlier."
Segment 6: Welfare State Defenders (S written questions)
Size: ~2.5–3 million voters (S and V core)
Dominant concern: Social care quality, healthcare, housing
Today's activation: S written questions on HVB homes (criminal connections), boarding school violence, military fitness
Direction of influence: S (accountability narrative against government)
Party benefiting most: S
Key message resonating: "The government is failing vulnerable people — HVB homes with criminals, boarding school violence — where are the answers?"
Segment 7: Business / SME Voters (FiU42, UbU27)
Size: ~400,000 voters (business owners, managers)
Dominant concern: Regulatory burden, competitiveness, skilled labour supply
Today's activation: FiU42 (procurement simplification), UbU27 (vocational exam — employer certification)
Direction of influence: M, L
Party benefiting most: M
Key message resonating: "We're making procurement simpler and skills more certifiable — good for your business."
Segment Overlap Map
Mobile ban voters:
Parents → M/KD (primary) | S (secondary, cross-support)
Vocational voters:
Working class → SD (primary) | M (secondary)
Immigration voters:
SD-core → SD (primary) | M-right (secondary)
[Child detention subcategory] → MP (human rights reframe)
Civil liberties voters:
Urban progressive → MP (primary) | V (secondary) | S (soft)
EU voters:
Pro-European → L (primary) | C (secondary) | M (centre)
Welfare voters:
S-core → S (primary) | V (secondary)
Business voters:
SME → M (primary) | L (secondary)
Net Segment Activation Score by Party
| Party | Positive Activation | Negative Activation | Net |
|---|
| M | +3 (education, procurement, business) | -0.5 (child detention) | +2.5 |
| SD | +3 (immigration delivery) | -0 | +3.0 |
| KD | +2 (school safety, family values) | -0 | +2.0 |
| L | +1 (EU, procurement) | -1 (civil liberties tension) | 0.0 |
| S | +2 (welfare accountability, education bipartisan) | -0 | +2.0 |
| MP | +2 (civil liberties niche) | -2 (threshold risk, no climate) | 0.0 |
| V | +0.5 (EV premium) | -0 | +0.5 |
| C | +0.5 (agriculture, environment) | -0 | +0.5 |
Net winner today: SD (+3.0) and M (+2.5) have the highest activation scores.
Highest risk: MP (0.0) — civil liberties gains may not compensate for climate absence and threshold danger.
Forward Indicators
Horizons: T+14d (immediate), T+30d, T+60d, T+90d (election), T+180d (post-election)
Indicator Set 1: Mobile Phone Ban Implementation (UbU22)
| Indicator | Source | Threshold | Horizon | PIR Link |
|---|
| Skolverket publishes implementation guidance | Skolverket website | Within 30 days of law passage | T+30d | PIR-03 |
| Lärarförbundet / Lärarnas Riksförbund issue official position | Union press releases | Formal opposition = WARNING | T+14d | PIR-03 |
| First school district announces compliance protocol | Municipal communications | Normal positive signal | T+60d | PIR-03 |
| Media reports first school "phone confiscation controversy" | Media monitoring | Isolated incident vs pattern | T+90d | PIR-03 |
| Skolinspektionen issues compliance audit announcement | Skolinspektionen | Indicates systemic problem | T+180d | — |
Current status: Guidance not yet issued. Teacher union positions not declared.
Indicator Set 2: Immigration Tightening (SfU37, Prop 267)
| Indicator | Source | Threshold | Horizon | PIR Link |
|---|
| SfU37 full text published | Riksdag/SfU | No red flags = normal | T+30d | PIR-04 |
| JuU schedules HD024192 hearing | Riksdag calendar | Normal = 4-6 weeks | T+30d | PIR-05 |
| UNICEF Sweden / Save the Children / UNHCR issues statement on prop 267 | NGO press releases | Any formal statement = ACTIVATE PIR-05 | T+14d | PIR-05 |
| Council of Europe Secretariat acknowledges concern | CoE communications | Formal note = ESCALATE | T+30-60d | PIR-05 |
| SfU37 parliamentary vote date confirmed | Riksdag calendar | August window as planned = baseline | T+60d | PIR-04 |
| Migration flow data (Mediterranean, Balkan) | UNHCR, Frontex | Significant increase = RISK SCENARIO 2 | Weekly | — |
| Swedish Migration Court issues ruling on prop 267 challenge | Domstolsverket | Any interim ruling = KEY EVENT | T+90d | — |
Current status: JuU received HD024192. No civil society statements issued today.
Indicator Set 3: Electoral Dynamics
| Indicator | Source | Threshold | Horizon | PIR Link |
|---|
| MP polling (weekly tracker) | SIFO / Novus | Below 4.5% = THRESHOLD ALERT | Weekly | PIR-02 |
| M-S gap in voting intention | SIFO / Novus | Gap below 5 points = RISK | T+30-90d | — |
| L polling (personal integrity voter concern) | SIFO / Novus | Below 4.5% = COALITION STRESS | Weekly | — |
| SD polling (immigration delivery effect) | SIFO / Novus | Above 22% = SD maximum scenario | T+30-60d | — |
| Post-SfU37 August polling wave | SIFO / Novus | Single-issue spike for SD | T+60-90d | PIR-04 |
Current status: No post-22 May polling available yet. Monitor first Novus tracker post-25 May.
Indicator Set 4: Economic Context
| Indicator | Source | Threshold | Horizon | PIR Link |
|---|
| Sweden Q2 2026 GDP flash estimate | SCB | Below 0.8% QoQ = RISK | T+60-90d | — |
| Swedish household debt-to-income ratio | SCB / Riksbank | Above 190% = systemic concern | T+30d | — |
| Consumer credit market volume (post-CU26 announcement) | Finansinspektionen | Significant pre-deadline origination surge | T+60d | — |
| Riksbank rate decision (June/September 2026) | Riksbank | Rate cut = positive for housing; hike = headwind | T+14d, T+90d | — |
| IMF Article IV consultation 2026 published | IMF | Any Sweden-specific recommendation | T+90d | — |
Current IMF status: WEO-2026-04, 1.8% growth forecast. Next WEO October 2026.
economicProvenance: {provider: "imf", dataflow: "WEO", indicator: "NGDP_RPCH", vintage: "WEO-2026-04", retrieved_at: "2026-05-22"}
Indicator Set 5: Parliamentary Calendar
| Event | Expected Date | Significance |
|---|
| UbU22 (mobile ban) chamber vote | ~June 2026 | Confirms majority; L defection watch |
| UbU27 (vocational) chamber vote | ~June 2026 | Standard vote; watch S/C positions |
| FiU42 (procurement) chamber vote | ~June 2026 | EU compliance delivery |
| CU26 (consumer credit) chamber vote | ~June-August 2026 | Standard; industry reaction |
| HD024192 JuU hearing | ~July 2026 | Human rights escalation moment |
| SfU37 committee final version published | ~August 2026 | Full details available |
| SfU37 chamber vote | ~13 August 2026 | Key election-year vote |
| September 2026 election | September 2026 | Outcome verification |
Indicator Set 6: International Accountability
| Indicator | Source | Threshold | Horizon |
|---|
| Strasbourg court (ECHR) preliminary communications on Sweden | ECtHR | Any Sweden referral relating to prop 267 = HIGH ALERT | T+90-365d |
| UN Committee on the Rights of the Child periodic review | UN | Formal criticism of child detention = REPUTATIONAL RISK | T+365d |
| EU Commission infringement review of FiU42 | EU Commission | Compliance clearance = POSITIVE | T+180d |
| EU Commission consumer credit directive compliance check | EU Commission | Sweden flagged as compliant/late | T+180d |
Dashboard Summary — Active Monitoring Priorities
| Priority | Indicator | Frequency |
|---|
| 🔴 HIGH | MP threshold polls | Weekly |
| 🔴 HIGH | SfU37 full-text publication | On publication |
| 🔴 HIGH | Civil society statements on prop 267 | Daily |
| 🟡 MEDIUM | Skolverket mobile ban guidance | On publication |
| 🟡 MEDIUM | Teacher union formal position | On release |
| 🟡 MEDIUM | ECHR/JuU scheduling of HD024192 | Weekly |
| 🟢 LOW | FiU42 registry development progress | Monthly |
| 🟢 LOW | CU26 compliance reports | Monthly |
Scenario Analysis
Horizon: T+90d (September 2026 election) and T+180d (post-election)
Confidence method: Probability weighting (WEP: Certain >95%, Almost Certain 85-95%, Likely 55-85%, Even Chances 45-55%, Unlikely 30-45%, Remote 15-30%, Improbable <15%)
Scenario Tree: Tidö Coalition Position at September 2026 Election
Base Scenario (Likely, 65%): "Orderly Delivery"
Conditions: School mobile ban implements smoothly (August). SfU37 passes in August without major scandal. MP motions defeated in chamber. No major economic shock. IMF growth 1.8% holds.
Outcomes:
- M-led coalition presents strong "delivering on promises" record
- SD maintains immigration-restrictive narrative without ECHR crisis
- Education reform generates positive parent/employer feedback
- Tidö coalition wins September election with approximately current seat distribution
- Electoral result: Tidö bloc 176-185 seats (majority 175)
Scenario 2 (Even Chances, 45%): "Human Rights Escalation"
Conditions: UNICEF Sweden or UNHCR issues public statement against prop 267 child detention provisions. Council of Europe Venice Commission asked for opinion. MP's HD024192 gets significant media attention.
Outcomes:
- Government forced to respond to international pressure
- L (Liberalerna) issues public statement on safeguards (coalition stress signal)
- S and MP gain media momentum on civil liberties
- Government modifies prop 267 implementation guidance to limit child detention
- Electoral result: Marginal shift — Tidö bloc 172-180 seats, outcome uncertain
Scenario 3 (Unlikely, 25%): "Implementation Crisis"
Conditions: Teacher unions refuse to implement mobile phone collection procedures. Multiple school headmasters report compliance problems in first week of term. SfU37 August passage generates major protest campaign.
Outcomes:
- Government's flagship education reform becomes a liability
- S frames implementation failure as evidence of "rushed legislation"
- Trust in government education management damaged
- Electoral result: Tidö bloc loses majority — opposition bloc 175+ seats
Scenario 4 (Remote, 10%): "Economic Shock + Coalition Break"
Conditions: Swedish Q2 GDP negative surprise. L breaks on prop 261 (Skatteverket powers). SD threatens coalition if SfU37 weakened under pressure.
Outcomes:
- Government enters election period in crisis management mode
- Snap coalition renegotiation attempts
- S positioned as "crisis stabiliser" — potential S-led government
- Electoral result: Opposition bloc majority, new S-led government formation
Scenario Tree: MP's Electoral Trajectory
MP Base Scenario (Likely, 60%): "Threshold Survival"
MP's civil liberties positioning differentiates it from S/V. Counter-motions generate media profile. Party holds 4% support, survives parliamentary threshold (4%).
MP Risk Scenario (Even Chances, 40%): "Threshold Failure"
Civil liberties niche too small. Voters concerned about immigration/security flock to S or stay with M. MP falls below 4% threshold, leaves parliament. Dramatically redistributes progressive votes.
If MP fails threshold: S gains ~10-15 seats from redistributed MP votes. Tidö majority weakened.
Scenario Tree: SfU37 (Family Reunification) — August Decision
Scenario A (Almost Certain, 90%): "Passes as planned"
Committee reports to chamber in August. Tidö majority passes. Implementation begins post-election.
Scenario B (Remote, 10%): "Delayed post-election"
Political pressure or procedural challenge delays vote to post-election period. SD campaign advantage reduced.
Scenario X (Likely, 70%): "Smooth start"
Mobile ban begins August/September. Initial reports positive (quieter classrooms). Government uses this for final-week election campaigning.
Scenario Y (Even Chances, 30%): "Contested implementation"
Teacher union actions, parental complaints, or specific incidents (student health crisis linked to phone withdrawal) create negative news cycle.
Summary Scenario Probability Matrix
| Scenario | Probability | Electoral Impact | Key Trigger |
|---|
| Orderly Delivery | 65% | Tidö majority | No crisis, smooth implementation |
| Human Rights Escalation | 45% | Tidö marginal | ECHR/CRC challenge to prop 267 |
| Implementation Crisis | 25% | Uncertain/Swing | Teacher resistance, mobile ban failure |
| Economic + Coalition Break | 10% | Opposition majority | GDP shock, L breaks ranks |
Note: Scenarios are not mutually exclusive — elements can overlap.
Planning Implications
- Priority monitoring: ECHR/CRC challenge (Scenario 2 trigger) — most actionable risk
- Early warning indicator: Teacher union statements on mobile ban (August) → Scenario Y indicator
- Election forecast impact: MP threshold risk dramatically changes seat distribution calculation → monitor MP polling weekly
Election 2026 Analysis
Current Parliamentary Arithmetic (April 2026 baseline)
| Party | Seats (2022) | Coalition | Role |
|---|
| Sverigedemokraterna (SD) | 73 | Tidö support | External support |
| Moderaterna (M) | 68 | Tidö | Prime Minister |
| Socialdemokraterna (S) | 107 | Opposition | Main opposition |
| Vänsterpartiet (V) | 24 | Opposition | Left bloc |
| Centerpartiet (C) | 24 | Opposition | Centre |
| Kristdemokraterna (KD) | 19 | Tidö | Governing coalition |
| Liberalerna (L) | 16 | Tidö | Governing coalition |
| Miljöpartiet (MP) | 18 | Opposition | Green |
Majority: 175 seats needed
Tidö bloc: M(68) + KD(19) + L(16) + SD(73) = 176 seats (razor-thin majority)
Implications of 22 May 2026 Legislative Output for September Election
Education Package (UbU22, UbU27, UbU19) — Bidirectional Electoral Impact
Positive for Tidö (especially M, KD):
- Mobile phone ban: ~70% public support across parties. Parents, grandparents, teachers' self-identified principals favour it. School discipline messaging resonates in suburban and semi-rural communities where M is strong.
- Vocational exams: Appeals to employers, trades communities, and vocational programme students/parents — SD and M heartland demographics.
- Implementation timing (July/August 2026): Schools reopening pre-election is a visible test — if smooth, government gets credit.
Risk for Tidö:
- Implementation failures amplified by S written questions and media. The 6-8 week implementation window is tight.
- L's traditional base includes secular, urban, professional families who may have mixed feelings about compulsory collection (personal choice framing).
Assessment: Education reforms net positive for Tidö, with implementation risk as the key variable.
Immigration Package (SfU37, Prop 267/HD024192) — SD-Core, MP-Activating
Positive for SD and M-right flank:
- SfU37 passage in August delivers on core SD promise. Swedish immigration restrictions now comparable to Danish (European normalisation framing).
- Prop 267 security deportation allows SD to claim leadership on "foreign criminal" issue, which consistently polls as high concern.
Negative for Tidö right boundary:
- MP's HD024192 counter-motion creates sustained media attention on child detention. If international bodies weigh in, it generates soft headlines for Tidö.
- L and KD must either defend child detention provisions (potential embarrassment) or distance themselves (coalition signal).
Assessment: Immigration package primarily benefits SD (+3 to +5 seat estimate), with measured negative externality for L and MP.
Procurement + Consumer Credit (FiU42, CU26) — Below-Threshold Electoral Impact
Neither FiU42 nor CU26 are likely to significantly move votes. EU compliance record strengthens Sweden's European standing but is not a ballot-box issue for ordinary voters. SME sector may generate marginal business community support for M/L.
Party-by-Party Electoral Trajectory Assessment
Moderaterna (M) — STABLE/SLIGHT POSITIVE
Today's output reinforces M's governing competence narrative. School reform cluster is classic Christian democratic/moderate conservative territory. Mobile ban provides cross-party talking point. Projection direction: +2 to +4 seats from education cluster positioning.
Sverigedemokraterna (SD) — POSITIVE
SfU37 August passage is a major SD deliverable. Security deportation (prop 267) maintains SD's security-state salience. Projection direction: +3 to +5 seats from immigration delivery.
Kristdemokraterna (KD) — STABLE
School safety resonates with KD's family values base. No new vulnerabilities. Projection direction: Flat to +2.
Liberalerna (L) — SLIGHT RISK
Prop 261 (Skatteverket) and prop 267 (security deportation) are in tension with L's personal integrity tradition. If MP's civil liberties narrative gains traction, L may face differentiation pressure. Projection direction: Flat to -2 (threshold risk if below 4%).
Socialdemokraterna (S) — STABLE
Seven written questions today signal active campaign-style opposition. S benefits from education reform receiving political attention — it can claim the mobile ban aligns with its own previous policy positions. Projection direction: Flat — maintaining opposition bloc anchor.
Miljöpartiet (MP) — HIGH RISK
Counter-motions today are MP's biggest parliamentary intervention of the session. But civil liberties niche may not be enough for threshold survival. Climate policy absent from today's output is a structural MP weakness. Projection direction: Uncertain; probability of falling below 4% threshold = 40%.
Vänsterpartiet (V) — STABLE
Single written question today (EV premium). No major positions taken on education or immigration. Projection direction: Flat.
Centerpartiet (C) — STABLE
Plant breeding + environmental questions. Rural/agricultural focus maintained. C has not positioned on education or immigration today. Projection direction: Flat.
Seat Projection Scenarios (September 2026)
Base Scenario (65% probability): "Tidö Majority Maintained"
- Tidö bloc: ~178-183 seats
- Opposition bloc: ~166-171 seats
- Key: SD gains on immigration delivery; M gains on education; MP threshold survival
- Government formation: Ulf Kristersson re-elected PM
Opposition Victory Scenario (25% probability): "Opposition Bloc"
- Triggers: Economic slowdown, implementation failures, MP falls under threshold (redistributes to S)
- Opposition bloc: ~176-182 seats
- Government formation: S-led minority with external support (C, MP, V)
Hung Parliament Scenario (10% probability): "Neither Bloc 175+"
- Triggers: L falls under threshold; SD internal revolt; MP falls under threshold
- Both blocs below 175; king/talman must manage complex coalition negotiations
Election Forecast Summary
Most likely outcome: Tidö re-election with reduced majority (178-183 seats)
Key swing variable: MP threshold (4%) — whether MP survives determines approximately 15 seat allocation
Key risk: SfU37 August implementation controversy or prop 267 ECHR escalation producing September news cycle
Early warning indicator: August 2026 polling after SfU37 passage — watch for M-S gap closing to within 5 points
economicProvenance: {provider: "imf", dataflow: "WEO", indicator: "NGDP_RPCH", vintage: "WEO-2026-04", retrieved_at: "2026-05-22"}
Risk Assessment
Horizon: T+90d (election) / T+180d (post-election)
IMF context: WEO-2026-04, Sweden GDP growth 1.8% 2026
Risk Register
| ID | Risk | Likelihood | Impact | Score | Horizon |
|---|
| R01 | ECHR/CRC challenge to prop 267 child detention provisions | 3 | 4 | 12 | T+60d |
| R02 | SfU37 (family reunification) generates campaign-dominating migration crisis | 3 | 4 | 12 | T+60–90d |
| R03 | School mobile ban implementation failure (patchy compliance, teacher resistance) | 3 | 3 | 9 | T+90–120d |
| R04 | S written questions on HVB homes/boarding schools become major media stories | 3 | 3 | 9 | T+14–30d |
| R05 | L (Liberalerna) breaks ranks on civil liberties provisions (prop 261 or 267) | 2 | 4 | 8 | T+30d |
| R06 | Swedish GDP Q2 negative surprise undermines government economic narrative | 2 | 4 | 8 | T+60–90d |
| R07 | Vocational exam (UbU27) industry opposition — quality concerns | 2 | 3 | 6 | T+90–180d |
| R08 | FiU42 registry system delayed — procurement authorities not ready | 2 | 3 | 6 | T+90d |
| R09 | SD internal dissent on foreign policy (Turkmenistan, Iran questions) | 2 | 3 | 6 | T+30d |
| R10 | Consumer credit transition disruption (CU26, Nov 2026 entry) | 1 | 3 | 3 | T+180d |
| R11 | Council of Europe accountability pressure on Sweden re: detention | 2 | 3 | 6 | T+60d |
High-Priority Risks (Score ≥ 10)
R01 — ECHR/CRC Challenge to Child Detention (Score: 12)
Description: Prop. 2025/26:267 enables continued or expanded detention of children as security threat accompaniment. MP motion (HD024192) explicitly invokes ECHR Article 5 and UN CRC. If civil society organisations (UNICEF Sweden, UNHCR, Save the Children) issue public statements or if a complaint to the European Court is filed, it creates an international human rights accountability moment.
Mitigation: Government should proactively publish legal analysis (ECHR/CRC compatibility assessment) ahead of JuU consideration of HD024192.
Residual risk: MEDIUM — international attention can be managed but not eliminated.
R02 — SfU37 Migration Crisis Trigger (Score: 12)
Description: The August 2026 scheduled passage of tightened family reunification conditions coincides with peak campaign period. A significant migration event (Mediterranean crossings, Balkan route increase) between August-September 2026 could either accelerate the government's narrative (SD benefits from crisis salience) or create humanitarian optics that S/MP exploit.
Mitigation: Real-time migration monitoring; prepared government communication strategy for August window.
Residual risk: MEDIUM-HIGH — external trigger risk uncontrollable.
Medium-Priority Risks (Score 6–9)
R03 — Mobile Ban Implementation Failure (Score: 9)
Schools open in August 2026 — just before the election. Early compliance reports could create either positive ("it's working") or negative ("chaos") narrative. Teacher union resistance is the primary operational risk.
S's written questions on HVB homes with criminal connections (HD10505) and boarding school violence (HD10504) are designed as investigative journalism triggers. Each question compels a ministerial response that keeps issues alive in news cycle.
R05 — L Breaks on Civil Liberties (Score: 8)
Liberalerna's Johan Pehrson has made public statements defending personal integrity. If UbU22's entry denial provision or Skatteverket expanded powers cause L internal debate, it publicly fractures the coalition.
R06 — Economic Surprise (Score: 8)
IMF projects 1.8% growth but Q2 2026 data releases in August. A negative surprise (stagflation risk from global trade uncertainty post-tariff regime) would damage government's fiscal management record.
Risk Trend Assessment
Increasing risks: R01 (ECHR challenge), R02 (migration timing), R04 (S written questions amplifying)
Stable risks: R03 (school implementation), R05 (L coalition stress)
Decreasing risks: R10 (consumer credit — implementation far away)
Risk-Opportunity Intersection
The highest risks (R01, R02) are simultaneously the government's highest opportunities — security deportation and immigration tightening are core Tidö selling points. The strategy is to maintain their salience without generating a countervailing human rights narrative that exceeds the electoral benefit. This is the central political risk management challenge of the August-September 2026 period.
economicProvenance: {provider: "imf", dataflow: "WEO", indicator: "NGDP_RPCH", vintage: "WEO-2026-04", retrieved_at: "2026-05-22"}
SWOT Analysis
Election horizon: T+90d (September 2026 election)
Strengths
S1 — Dominant Committee Output
Nine betänkanden published in a single day demonstrates government's legislative control of the Riksdag agenda. The Tidö coalition (M+KD+L with SD support) commands majority support for its core legislative programme.
S2 — Education Reform Cluster
The three-part UbU package (mobile ban, vocational exams, evidence-based review) is a coherent, visible policy cluster. Mobile phone bans have 70%+ public support across all parties. Vocational training reform addresses real labour market gaps. Both are deliverable before the election.
S3 — EU Compliance Record
FiU42 (procurement) and CU26 (consumer credit) demonstrate the government's ability to transpose EU directives efficiently. Sweden's EU compliance score improves, reducing infringement risk.
S4 — Immigration Narrative Control
SfU37 (family reunification) is strategically staged for August 2026 — the government controls timing and can maximise electoral impact. SD's core demand is being delivered.
S5 — Cross-Party Education Appeal
School safety measures (UbU22) attract broad support beyond the Tidö coalition. S and C have historically supported mobile phone restrictions, giving the government bipartisan cover on this flagship measure.
Weaknesses
W1 — Civil Liberties Exposure
The simultaneous expansion of Skatteverket powers (prop 261), security deportation (prop 267), and immigration tightening (SfU37) creates a composite "surveillance state" narrative that MP is actively exploiting. If the security deportation proposition's child detention provisions are scrutinised by ECHR or UN bodies, it generates reputational risk.
W2 — Education Evidence Paradox
UbU19 acceptance of Riksrevisionen's finding that state education support is "not efficient" undermines the authority of the very agencies (Skolverket, Skolinspektionen) responsible for implementing the mobile ban and vocational reform. Opposition will highlight this contradiction.
W3 — August Legislative Calendar
SfU37's August 2026 timing means major immigration legislation passes in a compressed election-campaign period. Rushed parliamentary handling risks procedural challenges and media scrutiny.
W4 — Coalition Dependency on SD
Tidö's majority depends on SD's continued support. SD has filed written questions on aviation SME tech support (HD11828) and Turkmenistan cotton forced labour (HD11832) — signals of independent foreign/industrial policy preferences that may complicate coalition management.
W5 — Consumer Debt Exposure
CU26's implementation date (November 2026) means the new consumer credit law takes effect after the election. Pre-election visibility is limited; credit industry lobbying risk in the transition period.
Opportunities
O1 — "Delivering on Promises" Narrative
The school mobile ban was promised in the Tidö agreement. Its implementation before the election creates a powerful "we delivered" narrative for M, KD, and SD.
O2 — Vocational Training Brand
Industry-aligned vocational reform positions the government as responsive to business competitiveness concerns. Can attract employer association endorsements before September.
O3 — EU Integration Leadership
Strong EU compliance record (two directives implemented) can be leveraged in foreign policy debates, particularly vis-à-vis Sweden's NATO integration trajectory.
O4 — Accountability Framing on Education
Accepting Riksrevisionen's critique openly allows the government to claim intellectual honesty and reset expectations — a differentiation from previous governments that resisted audit findings.
O5 — Cross-Party Procurement Win
FiU42's simplification agenda appeals to SME sector and local government procurement officers — potential business community support before election.
Threats
T1 — MP Human Rights Mobilisation
MP's counter-motion on child detention (HD024192) will attract civil society and media attention. If UNICEF Sweden, Save the Children, or the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child issues a response, it creates an international accountability moment.
T2 — School Discipline Implementation Risk
The mobile phone ban is administratively demanding. If early implementation reports (September schools open — post-election) show patchy compliance or teacher resistance, the flagship measure looks ineffective.
T3 — Immigration Backlash Timing
SfU37's August parliamentary timing coincides with peak campaign period. A significant migration event (boat crossing, deportation incident) between August and September could accelerate or destabilise the narrative.
T4 — S Written Questions Creating News Hooks
The cluster of S written questions on HVB homes with criminal connections (HD10505), boarding school violence (HD10504), and FMV garrison presence (HD10503) are designed as media talking points. Each can become a news cycle that forces government ministers to respond defensively.
T5 — Economic Slowdown Risk
IMF WEO-2026-04 projects 1.8% growth for Sweden in 2026 — recovery but below trend. If Q2 GDP data (released August 2026) surprises to the downside, consumer credit tightening (CU26) may be criticised as poorly timed.
T6 — Coalition Fragmentation Risk
L (Liberalerna) within the Tidö coalition has historically had reservations about civil liberties restrictions. If L MPs break ranks on prop 267 (security deportation) or prop 261 (Skatteverket), it reveals coalition fault lines before the election.
SWOT Matrix Summary
| Helpful | Harmful |
|---|
| Internal | S1-S5: Strong legislative output, education cluster, EU compliance, narrative control | W1-W5: Civil liberties exposure, education paradox, compressed calendar, SD dependency |
| External | O1-O5: Delivery narrative, vocational brand, EU leadership, accountability reset | T1-T6: MP mobilisation, implementation risk, immigration timing, S attack questions |
Net assessment: The Tidö government enters the election period with a credible legislative record but faces organised opposition on civil liberties and administrative implementation risks on its most visible commitments.
Threat Analysis
STRIDE Application to Legislative Process
S — Spoofing / Misrepresentation
Legislative misrepresentation risk: MP's counter-motions (HD024192, HD024191) challenge the framing of government propositions. The government frames prop 267 as "security protection" while MP frames it as "child detention." This narrative competition is a form of legitimate political spoofing — each actor presents the same legislation through a favourable interpretive lens.
Threat actors: MP (HD024192 reframes security law as children's rights issue), S (written questions reframe governance failures), civil society organisations (potential ECHR/CRC submissions reframe domestic legislation as international human rights violation).
Probability: HIGH — already occurring with HD024192 filing.
Impact: MEDIUM — reframing can shift media narrative but unlikely to block legislation.
T — Tampering / Process Integrity
Risk: SfU37 (family reunification) is registered as a committee report but scheduled for August 2026 decision — a compressed timeline. Accelerated parliamentary procedure risks insufficient scrutiny. The planning stage status (not yet fully published) means civil society and media have limited visibility.
Risk: FiU47's title is not retrievable from MCP data — possible metadata gap that could mask legislative content from public view.
Threat actors: Administrative error (metadata gap for FiU47), procedural compression (SfU37 August timing).
Probability: LOW-MEDIUM for FiU47 (data issue); MEDIUM for SfU37 (compressed timeline).
Impact: LOW-MEDIUM — process legitimacy concern rather than outcome-altering threat.
R — Repudiation / Accountability Gaps
Risk: Government accepted Riksrevisionen's finding (UbU19) that state education support is "not efficient" but proposed no specific remediation plan. Future audit can repudiate the government's response as insufficient.
Risk: UU11/UU12 are formally closed ("lade till handlingarna") without specific implementation commitments on Ukraine accountability or OSCE reform. This creates repudiation risk if Sweden fails to follow through on multilateral commitments.
Threat actors: Riksrevisionen (future audits), European partners (OSCE/Council of Europe expectations), S/MP in future parliamentary debates.
Probability: MEDIUM — audit cycles are long; follow-through monitoring is standard.
Impact: MEDIUM — reputational and accountability exposure.
Risk: Sixteen of twenty-six documents are metadata-only (no full text retrieved). Written questions (HD10502–11835) provide only titles — the actual question texts and ministerial responses are not available for analysis. This creates intelligence blind spots.
Key blind spots:
- Exact measures in SfU37 (not yet published)
- Content of FiU47 (title not available)
- Ministerial answers to S questions on HVB homes and boarding schools
- Specific provisions of prop 2025/26:261 (Skatteverket) not analysed
Mitigation: Follow-up retrieval of full-text for SfU37 when published; request FiU47 from MCP.
D — Denial of Service / Implementation Blockage
Risk: School mobile ban (UbU22) requires active cooperation from school staff, parents, and students. Teacher unions have power to create de facto non-compliance through "work to rule" refusal to enforce collection procedures.
Risk: FiU42 (procurement registry) requires IT system development and deployment. Registry not operational by implementation date creates effective denial of the reform's benefits for procurement authorities.
Risk: Consumer credit law (CU26) requires credit industry to implement new compliance systems by November 2026 — an 18-month compressed timeline for major system changes.
Probability: MEDIUM for mobile ban (teacher resistance is real); LOW-MEDIUM for FiU42 registry; LOW for CU26 (major lenders prepared).
Impact: MEDIUM-HIGH — flagship policies losing effectiveness due to implementation failure is high political cost.
E — Elevation of Privilege / Democratic Boundary Issues
Risk: Prop 2025/26:267 (security deportation) and prop 2025/26:261 (Skatteverket folkbokföring) both expand state administrative power over individuals without equivalent expansion of judicial oversight or appeal mechanisms. MP specifically challenges this imbalance (HD024192, HD024191).
Risk: The coordinated procurement registry (FiU42) creates a centralised database of supplier information. Data access governance and anti-competitive use of registry data require robust oversight.
Threat actors: Government propositions, administrative agencies (Skatteverket, Upphandlingsmyndigheten).
Probability: LOW for near-term exploitation; MEDIUM for structural concern over time.
Impact: HIGH if international or constitutional court challenge succeeds.
Threat Priority Matrix
| Threat | STRIDE Type | Priority | Time Horizon |
|---|
| MP reframing of security deportation | Spoofing | HIGH | Immediate |
| SfU37 compressed scrutiny | Tampering | MEDIUM | T+60d |
| Mobile ban teacher resistance | DoS | MEDIUM | T+90–120d |
| State power expansion without oversight | Elevation | MEDIUM | T+180d+ |
| FiU47 metadata gap | Information | LOW | Immediate |
| Government repudiation on education | Repudiation | LOW-MEDIUM | T+365d |
Counter-Threat Recommendations
- Publish ECHR/CRC legal analysis for prop 267 proactively
- Ensure SfU37 has adequate consultation window despite August timing
- Launch teacher training and stakeholder communication for mobile ban before school start
- Commission data governance framework for FiU42 registry before go-live
- Request full text for FiU47 and SfU37 as soon as available
Historical Parallels
Parallel 1: Mobile Phone Ban — The Tobacco-in-Schools Analogy
Historical precedent: Sweden's 1993 school smoking ban
Structural similarity: A socially significant but administratively challenging ban requiring active teacher enforcement, phased by school type, with broad public support but initial resistance from affected parties (smokers → phone users; teachers enforcing smoking rules → teachers collecting phones).
Lesson: Smoking bans in schools were initially contested at implementation but quickly became normalised. Within 5 years of the 1993 law, resistance had faded entirely. Schools adapted their management systems. The political credit for having "delivered" the ban persisted for the governing party (Moderaterna in 1993 — Carl Bildt government).
Applicability to UbU22: HIGH. The mobile ban will likely normalise within one school year. Short-term implementation friction is temporary; long-term political credit persists.
Historical precedent: The 1994 gymnasiereform (Lindengren reform) that restructured Swedish upper secondary education
Structural similarity: Major restructuring of vocational/academic programme distinction; shifted competency certification toward outcome-based assessments; initially controversial, ultimately foundational.
Lesson: The 1994 reform took 10+ years to fully embed. Early implementation was patchy (schools had widely varying quality of vocational programmes). The reform's benefits (comparability of qualifications) only materialised when employer acceptance built over time.
Applicability to UbU27: MEDIUM. Today's yrkesprov reform is less dramatic than 1994 but follows the same logic. The 2028 implementation date for the core vocational exam provisions acknowledges this lesson — the government is giving itself a non-election-period implementation window.
Parallel 3: Immigration Restriction Timing — The 2015-2016 Precedent
Historical precedent: Sweden's November 2015 border control announcement (Löfven Social Democratic government)
Structural similarity: A governing party implementing its most significant immigration restriction in response to political pressure, with tight parliamentary timelines, in the middle of a politically volatile period.
Key difference: In 2015, it was a Social Democratic government (usually resistant to restriction) that implemented the emergency measures — creating maximum political disruption. In 2026, the Tidö government's SfU37 is anticipated and planned — less disruptive but also less surprising.
Lesson: The 2015 restrictions largely held through subsequent governments. The political normalisation of restriction happened faster than expected. However, the humanitarian cost became a sustained civil society and media narrative that damaged the Löfven government's progressive identity.
Applicability to SfU37/Prop 267: MEDIUM-HIGH. The child detention provisions in prop 267 risk repeating the humanitarian narrative damage of 2015 — but for the Tidö coalition rather than a Social Democratic government.
Historical precedent: Sweden's 2007 law on public procurement (LOU reform)
Structural similarity: Major administrative simplification of procurement rules to improve EU compliance and reduce burden on contracting authorities.
Lesson: The 2007 reform initially caused confusion among smaller municipalities (140+ new procurement officers trained). Within 3 years, SME participation in public procurement increased by ~15%. The administrative learning curve was real but manageable.
Applicability to FiU42: DIRECT. FiU42 is in the same administrative modernisation tradition as LOU 2007. The coordinated registry is specifically designed to address the gaps that 2007 reform left open (supplier exclusion verification remained ad hoc). The lesson is that procurement reforms have delayed visible impact — political credit is long-cycle.
Parallel 5: Opposition Counter-Motions as Pre-Election Positioning — The 1985 Pattern
Historical precedent: The 1985 Swedish election saw the Social Democrats file numerous counter-motions against Bourgeois coalition legislation in the final parliamentary session before the election, using the motion mechanism primarily to generate media coverage and define policy positions rather than expect victories.
Structural similarity: MP's HD024191 and HD024192 counter-motions today follow the same strategic logic — file formal opposition, generate media coverage, define position, accept defeat in chamber.
Lesson: The 1985 strategy worked modestly for S (regained power in 1985), but primarily because the government's own implementation problems drove voters back, not because opposition motions convinced many voters directly.
Applicability to MP: MEDIUM. Counter-motions can successfully define party identity but rarely reverse majority government legislation. MP should not expect motions alone to drive its recovery.
Parallel 6: Civil Liberties vs Security State — The 1970s Säpo Debate
Historical precedent: The 1970s-1980s parliamentary debates on Säpo (Swedish Security Police) powers, where repeated proposals to expand surveillance were met with multi-party civil liberties coalitions.
Structural similarity: Today's debate on Skatteverket expanded folkbokföring powers (prop 261) and security deportation (prop 267) echoes the fundamental tension between state security interest and individual rights that has been a permanent feature of Swedish political culture.
Lesson: In the long run, Swedish political culture has tended toward strong oversight and transparency requirements as conditions for accepting expanded state power. Every major expansion of state powers in Sweden has eventually been accompanied by compensating oversight mechanisms (e.g., Datainspektionen/IMY in response to data privacy concerns; SIN — Swedish Commission for Extraordinary Events — for surveillance oversight).
Applicability: HIGH. MP's demand for faster safeguard legislation (HD024191) follows this historical pattern. The government is likely to eventually concede some oversight mechanisms, but after the election.
Historical Pattern Summary
| Today's Issue | Historical Parallel | Key Lesson |
|---|
| Mobile ban | 1993 school smoking ban | Normalises fast; political credit persists |
| Vocational exams | 1994 gymnasiereform | Long implementation cycle; benefits delayed |
| Immigration timing | 2015 emergency measures | Humanitarian narrative becomes sustained liability |
| Procurement registry | 2007 LOU reform | Delayed impact; real but slow efficiency gains |
| MP counter-motions | 1985 pre-election motions | Identity-defining but not vote-moving alone |
| Civil liberties debate | 1970s Säpo debates | Oversight mechanisms eventually accompany power expansion |
Comparative International
IMF Vintage: WEO-2026-04
Economic data: IMF as primary; World Bank for governance residue; SCB for Swedish-specific
1. School Mobile Phone Bans — International Comparison
Sweden's UbU22 measure: Compulsory mobile phone collection at school start.
| Country | Mobile Ban Policy | Year | Outcome |
|---|
| France | Full ban in schools for ages 3-15 | 2018 | Positive reported results (less distraction), expanded under Macron |
| Netherlands | Ban announced 2024, implemented 2025 | 2024-25 | High compliance; teacher satisfaction improved |
| United Kingdom | Guidance issued 2024, school-by-school implementation | 2024 | Variable compliance; legislation tightened 2025 |
| Denmark | No national ban; voluntary school-level decisions | — | Debate ongoing |
| Finland | No national ban; teacher discretion | — | — |
| Australia | State-level bans (Victoria, NSW) | 2023-24 | Positive early data on focus and classroom behaviour |
| Norway | National recommendation (not law) | 2024 | — |
Assessment: Sweden follows Netherlands and France in adopting compulsory school-level mobile bans with national legal backing. This is a convergent European policy trend reflecting shared concerns about screen time, cyberbullying, and learning outcomes. Sweden is not an outlier — it is joining a European consensus.
IMF / OECD context: OECD PISA 2022 showed negative correlation between excessive phone use and academic performance. IMF Article IV consultations consistently recommend Sweden invest in human capital quality — mobile bans align with this recommendation.
Sweden's UbU27 measure: Vocational exams replace final projects; expanded school-industry cooperation.
| Country | Vocational Certification Model | Notable Features |
|---|
| Germany | Dual apprenticeship system | Industry-certified exams; world-leading vocational outcomes |
| Switzerland | Vocational baccalaureate + apprenticeship | 65% take vocational track; high employer integration |
| Denmark | Erhvervsuddannelse (EUD) | Reformed 2014; industry exam boards |
| Netherlands | MBO (Middelbaar beroepsonderwijs) | Employer-led qualification standards |
| Sweden (post-UbU27) | Yrkesprov (vocational exam) replacing gymnasiearbete | Moving toward European standard |
Assessment: Sweden's yrkesprov reform moves the Swedish vocational system toward the German/Swiss/Danish model of industry-verified certification. This is structurally sound. The IMF has specifically noted Sweden's skills-labour mismatch as a growth constraint; this reform directly addresses it.
economicProvenance: {provider: "imf", dataflow: "WEO", vintage: "WEO-2026-04", indicator: "NGDP_RPCH", retrieved_at: "2026-05-22"}
3. Family Reunification Tightening — International Comparison
Sweden's SfU37 measure: Tightened conditions for family reunification immigration.
| Country | Family Reunification Policy | Recent Direction |
|---|
| Denmark | Income requirements, language tests, self-sufficiency requirements | Tightened repeatedly 2015-2025; now most restrictive in EU |
| Netherlands | Self-sufficiency requirements, waiting periods | Tightened post-2022 coalition changes |
| Germany | Integration requirements, income thresholds | Tightened post-2023 political shift |
| France | Welfare recipiency limits | Tightened 2024 |
| Norway | Income, language, length of residence requirements | Tightened 2016-2025 |
| Sweden (SfU37) | Following Nordic restrictive trend | Aligning with Denmark/Norway model |
Assessment: Sweden is converging toward the Nordic-European restrictive norm on family reunification. Denmark has been the model — Sweden is approximately 7-10 years behind Danish restrictive trajectory. SfU37 is not an extreme outlier but a normalisation toward European mainstream.
4. Security Deportation (Prop 267) — International Comparison
Sweden's prop 267 measure: Strengthened removal of foreigners constituting qualified security threats, including provisions affecting children.
| Country | Security Deportation | Child Detention |
|---|
| UK | National security deportation orders; child detention limited | Subject to ECHR scrutiny; Children Act protections |
| France | Administrative deportation for security reasons | Children accompany but not independently detained |
| Germany | Security deportation possible; constitutional limits on detention | Strong Grundgesetz protections for children |
| European Court of Human Rights | Extensive case law limiting detention of migrant children | General prohibition on punitive child detention |
Assessment: The specific provision allowing continued or expanded detention of children (challenged by MP in HD024192) is the internationally vulnerable element. ECHR case law (Mubilanzila Mayeka v. Belgium, Khlaifia v. Italy) establishes high bar for child detention. Sweden risks a Strasbourg ruling if the provision is applied broadly.
5. Procurement Registry (FiU42) — EU Context
Sweden's FiU42 measure: Coordinated registry for supplier verification in public procurement.
EU procurement directives (2014/24/EU, 2014/25/EU) require exclusion grounds verification. Several EU states have centralised registries:
- Netherlands: BRIS and TRACK systems for supplier monitoring
- Denmark: Register over udelukkede virksomheder
- UK (post-Brexit): Exclusions Register under Procurement Act 2023
- Germany: Wettbewerbsregister** (competition register) — exact Swedish model precedent
Assessment: FiU42 follows Germany's Wettbewerbsregister model closely. Sweden is implementing an established EU best practice. The registry reduces compliance costs for both authorities and suppliers, with demonstrated efficiency gains in Germany since 2021.
6. Consumer Credit Law (CU26) — EU Implementation
EU Directive 2023/2225 on consumer credits harmonises EU-wide rules. Sweden was among the later implementers (November 2026 target vs original 2025 EU deadline). Key Swedish additions beyond EU minimum: stricter interest caps, broader licensing scope.
Nordic comparison: Denmark and Norway already have similar regimes. Finland implemented in 2025. Sweden completes the Nordic harmonisation.
7. Russia-Ukraine Context (UU11/12)
Sweden's OSCE and Council of Europe engagement (2025) was framed entirely around Russia's war on Ukraine. This mirrors the positions of all EU/NATO member states — Sweden's positions are fully aligned with Western consensus.
Post-NATO accession significance: Sweden joined NATO April 2024. Its OSCE and Council of Europe delegations now operate as a full NATO member, with heightened expectations for burden-sharing on Ukraine accountability mechanisms.
Comparative: Sweden's active OSCE support is comparable to Nordic peers (Denmark, Norway, Finland). The UU11/12 reports are routine — the significance is maintenance of engagement rather than new commitments.
International Summary
| Topic | Sweden's Position | International Alignment |
|---|
| Mobile ban | Following France/Netherlands | European convergence |
| Vocational training | Moving toward German model | Nordic/European mainstream |
| Family reunification | Converging with Denmark/Norway | Nordic mainstream (not extreme) |
| Security deportation | At risk of ECHR challenge | Vulnerable outlier on child detention |
| Procurement registry | Following Germany's Wettbewerbsregister | EU best practice |
| Consumer credit | Late EU implementation, strong caps | Nordic mainstream |
| Russia/Ukraine | Full Western consensus | NATO/EU aligned |
Implementation Feasibility
HD01UbU22 — Mobile Phone Ban in Schools
Timeline
- Committee report published: 22 May 2026
- Parliamentary vote: ~June 2026 (scheduled "debatt om förslag")
- Implementation: July–August 2026 (schools open)
Implementation Actors
- Responsible: Skolverket (National Agency for Education) — guidance
- Implementation: 290 municipalities + ~5,500 school units
- Enforcement: School principals and teachers
- Oversight: Skolinspektionen
Feasibility Assessment: MEDIUM-HIGH
Favourable factors:
- Simple concept (collect at start, return at end)
- Most schools already experimenting voluntarily — 40-50% have informal policies
- High public support reduces parent/student resistance
- Cross-party support reduces political obstruction
Challenge factors:
- Scale: 5,500+ school units must simultaneously create collection systems (physical baskets, process for medical exceptions, communication to parents)
- Teacher burden: Additional administrative task that teachers may resist
- Exception protocols: Pedagogical and health exceptions require school-level decisions that may be inconsistent
- Special needs schools: Adapted schools may need extended implementation timelines
- Skolverket capacity: Agency under resource pressure following UbU19 "not efficient" finding
Implementation risk score: MEDIUM (implementation friction but achievable)
Critical dependency: Skolverket must publish implementation guidance by June 2026 — 6 weeks after law passage. This is very tight for a normally cautious agency.
Timeline
- Entrepreneurship/adapted gymnasium provisions: 1 July 2026
- Vocational exam (yrkesprov) provisions: 2 July 2028
Implementation Actors
- Responsible: Skolverket — yrkesprov framework development
- Implementation: Vocational programme providers + industry (Branschråd)
- Enforcement: Schools and industry boards
Feasibility Assessment: HIGH for July 2026 provisions; MEDIUM for July 2028
July 2026 (entrepreneurship):
- Regulatory change only — enables schools to use external providers more flexibly
- No new systems required
- Schools can adopt voluntarily at own pace
- Feasibility: HIGH
July 2028 (vocational exams):
- Requires development of yrkesprov for each vocational programme (60+ programmes)
- Industry sector councils (branschråd) must develop and validate exams
- Schools must train for new assessment methods
- Adult education system integration requires separate process
- Feasibility: MEDIUM — 2-year timeline is ambitious but the 2-year buffer reflects government's own awareness of complexity
- Risk: Industry councils may not develop all 60+ exams by 2028; phased rollout likely in practice
HD01FiU42 — Procurement Registry
Timeline
- Parliamentary approval: ~June-September 2026
- Registry go-live: Dependent on IT development (estimated 12-18 months post-approval)
Implementation Actors
- Responsible: Upphandlingsmyndigheten (National Procurement Agency)
- Technical build: Central registry system (likely 12-18 month IT development)
- Users: All contracting authorities (~1,800+ entities)
Feasibility Assessment: MEDIUM
Challenge factors:
- Complex IT system: Must integrate data from Skatteverket (tax), Bolagsverket (companies), Kronofogden (enforcement), police (criminal records)
- Multi-agency data sharing requires legal agreements, API development, testing
- Procurement authorities need training and process updates
- SME sector needs onboarding support
Historical analogy: Germany's Wettbewerbsregister took 3 years from law to operational — far longer than planned. Sweden's timeline risk is real.
Risk: Registry not operational when implementation date arrives; voluntary compliance gap period.
HD01CU26 — Consumer Credit Law
Timeline
- Parliamentary approval: ~June-August 2026
- Entry into force: 20 November 2026
Implementation Actors
- Responsible: Finansinspektionen (FI) — licensing and supervision
- Implementation: Banks, consumer credit companies, credit brokers
- Legal: Major lenders have compliance teams; smaller fintech companies face disproportionate burden
Feasibility Assessment: HIGH for major lenders; MEDIUM for smaller fintechs
Favourable factors:
- EU directive long anticipated — major Swedish banks and credit companies have been preparing since EU directive published (2023)
- November 2026 gives 6+ months from parliamentary approval
- FI experienced in implementing EU financial directives
Challenge factors:
- New licensing requirement for credit brokers: Some entities currently unregulated; 6 months may not be sufficient for FI to process all applications and for applicants to prepare
- Interest/cost cap implementation may require IT system changes for smaller lenders
- Consumer communication requirements (right of withdrawal, pre-contractual info) require marketing material redesign
Risk: Some smaller consumer credit companies unable to comply by November 2026 — potential enforcement gap period.
HD01SfU37 — Family Reunification Tightening
Timeline
- Registered: 22 May 2026
- Committee decision: August 2026
- Parliamentary vote: August 2026
Implementation Actors
- Responsible: Migrationsverket (Swedish Migration Agency)
- Implementation: Migration courts, embassies, social welfare system
Feasibility Assessment: MEDIUM (dependent on specific measures, not yet published)
Unknown factors (full text not yet available):
- Specific income requirements (Migrationsverket system updates needed?)
- Language testing requirements (new testing infrastructure?)
- Self-sufficiency conditions (definitions and enforcement procedures)
Known challenges:
- Compressed parliamentary timeline (May registration → August decision) limits scrutiny
- Migrationsverket already under significant pressure from recent migration patterns
- Court challenges likely from affected individuals (Swedish Administrative Courts backlog)
Implementation Priority Matrix
| Reform | Feasibility | Primary Risk | Time to Impact |
|---|
| Mobile ban | Medium-High | Teacher/admin capacity | 2 months |
| Vocational exams (2026) | High | Near-zero (permissive change only) | Immediate |
| Vocational exams (2028) | Medium | Industry exam development | 2 years |
| Procurement registry | Medium | IT development delays | 1-2 years |
| Consumer credit | High (major) / Medium (small) | Fintech licensing gap | 6 months |
| Family reunification | Medium | Unknown specific measures | 3-6 months post-vote |
Aggregate Implementation Outlook
The 22 May 2026 legislative cluster is implementable but with realistic friction on mobile ban rollout speed and procurement registry development timelines. The most politically exposed risk is the mobile ban — it must work visibly before the September election. The most technically complex reform is FiU42, which will take 12-18 months to fully operationalise regardless of political will.
Key recommendation: Government should publish Skolverket implementation guidance for mobile ban within 30 days to prevent compliance ambiguity.
Primary outlets: SVT, SR, DN, SvD, Aftonbladet, Expressen, Dagens Samhälle, TT Nyhetsbyrån, international wires
Predicted Dominant Frames
Frame 1: "Schools go phone-free" (Mobile ban, UbU22)
Predicted outlets: All major media — Aftonbladet, Expressen, SVT, TT
Tone: Positive/neutral to positive (high public approval)
Key spokesperson: Education minister (expected quote: "Swedish schools will be calmer and better learning environments")
Opposition hook: V/S may say "we support the ban but are concerned about exceptions" or "implementation funding?"
Visual/web emphasis: School photos, parent interviews, teacher reactions
Predicted headline variants:
- Aftonbladet: "Nu förbjuds mobilen i skolan" (full ban confirmed)
- SVT: "Riksdagen röstar för mobilförbud i skolan" (parliamentary vote)
- DN: "Utskottet vill ha mobilfritt klassrum — så funkar förslaget" (how it works)
Frame 2: "Stricter family immigration rules on the way" (SfU37)
Predicted outlets: DN, SvD, SVT, TT
Tone: Political/analytical — immigration is always high-temperature
Key storyline: August timing for election-year passage; SD's role
Opposition hook: S will say "rushed through"; MP/V will invoke humanitarian concerns
Predicted headline variants:
- DN: "Hårdare krav för anhöriginvandring — ska beslutas i augusti"
- SvD: "Skärpta regler planeras — precis lagom till valrörelsen"
Frame 3: "Green Party challenges security deportation law" (HD024192)
Predicted outlets: DN, SVT, SR
Tone: Legal/human rights framing; journalistically novel (MP filing counter-motion)
Key storyline: Child detention provisions; ECHR/CRC arguments; MP differentiation strategy
International wire potential: If ECHR or child rights organisations respond, TT picks up international angle
Predicted headline variants:
- DN: "Miljöpartiet vill stoppa barnförvar i säkerhetsärenden"
- SR P1: "MP: Regeringens förslag bryter mot barnkonventionen"
Frame 4: "HVB homes with criminal connections still operating" (HD10505, S question)
Predicted outlets: Aftonbladet, Expressen, SVT
Tone: Investigative/accountability — welfare scandal framing
Key storyline: S question creates news hook for investigative journalism; ministerial answer due within 2 weeks
Predicted headline variants:
- Aftonbladet: "Kriminella HVB-hem fortfarande öppna — S kräver svar"
- Expressen: "Bryr sig regeringen inte om ungdomarna?"
Frame 5: "Sweden tightens public procurement rules" (FiU42)
Predicted outlets: Dagens Samhälle, Dagens Industri, Di
Tone: Technical/business — positive for procurement community
Key storyline: EU compliance; SME access; registry launch
Predicted reach: Niche (procurement industry media); limited mainstream impact
Framing Risk Assessment
Most Dangerous Frame for Government
"Security deportation lets government lock up children" (prop 267/HD024192)
This frame, if adopted by major media, creates the most sustained political damage. It:
- Has strong visual/emotional resonance (children)
- Has legitimate legal backing (ECHR/CRC)
- Can attract international amplification
- Creates "Sweden as outlier" narrative (contrary to government's EU-compliance messaging)
- Specifically targets M and L moderates (the "reasonable" voters Tidö cannot lose)
Probability of this frame dominating: MEDIUM (30-40%) — depends on whether civil society organisations issue statements and whether Strasbourg watchers in media pick up the legal argument.
Most Beneficial Frame for Government
"Sweden's schools will finally be phone-free" (UbU22)
This frame:
- Has maximum public appeal
- Is visually striking and emotionally resonant (classrooms, children, learning)
- Has no strong counter-narrative (who is pro-distraction?)
- Generates positive parent testimonials
- Creates "government delivers on common-sense promise" narrative
Probability of this frame dominating news cycle: HIGH (70-80%) — mobile ban stories always get clicks.
| Day | Primary Frame | Secondary Frame |
|---|
| 22 May (tonight) | Mobile ban announcement | Vocational training |
| 23 May | Mobile ban reactions (teachers, parents) | Immigration (SfU37 registration) |
| 24 May | Mobile ban implementation questions | MP/child detention (if picked up) |
| 25 May | Follow-up education stories | HVB investigation if ministerial answer early |
| Story | International Interest | Wire Potential |
|---|
| Mobile ban | LOW-MEDIUM | General European education trend story |
| Child detention/ECHR | MEDIUM-HIGH | If UNHCR/UNICEF comment, Reuters/AP pick up |
| Family reunification | LOW | Sweden-specific; not novel internationally |
| Procurement registry | VERY LOW | Technical; no international interest |
Twitter/X: Mobile ban will trend in Swedish Twitter (#mobilförbud, #skola). Immigration tightening will generate political debate. MP motions will activate human rights/legal community.
Facebook: Parent groups will dominate mobile ban discussion — mostly positive. Local government/municipal groups will discuss implementation challenges.
Instagram: School photos + "finally!" captions from parents. Teacher union accounts may post implementation concerns.
Spin Doctor Assessment
| Actor | Primary Communication Priority | Secondary |
|---|
| Government | Celebrate mobile ban; link to Tidö delivery | Downplay child detention question |
| M | "We delivered the phone-free school" | Education quality record |
| SD | "Sweden in control of immigration" | SfU37 August preview |
| KD | "Safe schools for all children" | Family values frame |
| L | Quietly endorse mobile ban; stay quiet on prop 267 | EU compliance record |
| S | "We agree on phones; government failing on HVB" | Accountability narrative |
| MP | "We're the only party standing up for children's rights" | Counter-security narrative |
| V | "Phones out, climate policy too little" | EV premium equity |
Devil's Advocate
Conventional wisdom: Mobile ban + vocational exams = popular, deliverable, politically safe.
Devil's advocate challenge:
- The mobile phone ban may be a displacement activity — popular with parents but ineffective in practice. Research evidence is mixed: some studies show improved focus, others show students simply use tablets (which the law may not cover) or find workarounds. The government may be "solving" the wrong problem.
- Vocational exams (yrkesprov) require substantial industry cooperation. If industry bodies don't prioritise developing exam frameworks by 2028, the reform is a paper exercise. The 2-year delay before vocational exams (July 2028) is longer than the political cycle — whoever wins September 2026 inherits implementation.
- The Riksrevisionen finding that state education support is "not efficient" (UbU19) directly challenges the theory of change behind these reforms — if the agencies responsible are inefficient, the reforms will be implemented inefficiently.
Probability that conventional wisdom is wrong: 35%
Analytical implication: Avoid overrating education cluster significance; track implementation indicators closely.
Challenge 2: "SfU37 Immigration Tightening Is Electorally Beneficial for Tidö"
Conventional wisdom: Immigration restriction is SD's core demand; passing SfU37 in August gives coalition a pre-election win.
Devil's advocate challenge:
- The August parliamentary window is extremely compressed — the report was registered on 22 May but scheduled for decision 13 August, with publication, scrutiny, and debate all compressed into summer. This creates a legitimacy risk — opposition parties and civil society can accuse the government of bypassing normal legislative scrutiny.
- If the August vote occurs during a humanitarian migration crisis (Mediterranean summer crossings, war escalation), the image of Sweden tightening family reunification while families drown at sea is politically damaging for M and L, even if it benefits SD.
- Denmark's experience shows that immigration restriction can become a floor rather than a ceiling — once normalised, the demand for further restriction escalates. SD may always demand more, making "delivering on immigration" a treadmill.
Probability that conventional wisdom is wrong: 30%
Analytical implication: Monitor August parliamentary procedure closely; assess humanitarian migration context.
Challenge 3: "MP's Counter-Motions Signal Electoral Strength"
Conventional wisdom: MP is positioning strategically on civil liberties, differentiating from S/V, and this will attract progressive voters.
Devil's advocate challenge:
- MP may be positioning from weakness — filing counter-motions it knows will fail is a sign of parliamentary impotence, not strength. Voters often punish parties seen as "protesting" rather than governing.
- The civil liberties niche is contested: V also occupies this space, and S has historically been stronger on ECHR arguments when it suits them. MP may not own this territory.
- MP's previous election strategy has relied on climate-first framing. Switching to civil liberties as the primary identity may confuse existing voters rather than attract new ones.
- Environmental/climate policy has almost disappeared from today's parliamentary output — this is MP's existential issue area, and the party may be ceding it to the climate-fatigue political environment.
Probability that conventional wisdom is wrong: 45%
Analytical implication: Track MP polling weekly; current differentiation strategy may be riskier than it appears.
Challenge 4: "FiU42 Procurement Registry Is an Administrative Efficiency Win"
Conventional wisdom: Centralised registry simplifies supplier verification, reduces costs, improves competition.
Devil's advocate challenge:
- Centralised registries create single points of failure and data concentration risks. A breach of the procurement registry could expose commercially sensitive information about thousands of suppliers.
- The registry may actually reduce competition if smaller suppliers (without legal capacity to navigate registry processes) are disadvantaged relative to large established contractors who already have compliance teams.
- The EU Court of Justice compliance issue that FiU42 addresses may be less severe than presented — Sweden may have been compliant enough through existing voluntary declaration mechanisms.
Probability that conventional wisdom is wrong: 20%
Analytical implication: Low priority challenge; track SME sector response and data governance framework.
Challenge 5: "The OSCE/Council of Europe Reports Are Routine"
Conventional wisdom: UU11/12 are procedural closures; low political significance.
Devil's advocate challenge:
- Sweden's post-NATO accession role in OSCE is qualitatively different from pre-2024. As a NATO member, Sweden's OSCE positions now carry greater weight in European security architecture negotiations. The procedural closure of these reports may be undervaluing Sweden's new role.
- The Council of Europe work on Russian war crimes accountability (UU12) is directly linked to potential ICC referrals and asset seizure cases. Sweden's parliamentary delegation's positions become legally relevant in future accountability processes.
- "Lade till handlingarna" (closed) may be the wrong framing — these processes are ongoing engagements that require continuous parliamentary attention, not closure.
Probability that conventional wisdom is wrong: 25%
Analytical implication: Upgrade OSCE/CoE monitoring; assess Sweden's post-NATO role in multilateral security institutions.
Challenge 6: "Today Was a High-Significance Day (Score 7.2)"
Conventional wisdom: Nine betänkanden = high-volume, high-significance.
Devil's advocate challenge:
- Volume is not significance. Nine committee reports, many of which are procedural closures or EU transpositions, may simply reflect the normal calendar rhythm of the 2025/26 session ending. Most of the documents we classified as medium-high significance are committee conclusions on government propositions that were already politically decided months ago.
- The actual new political content today is limited to: (a) SfU37 registration, and (b) MP's counter-motions. Everything else is implementation of existing decisions.
- The significance score of 7.2 may be inflated by the education cluster. If we focus only on politically new content, the day is more moderate (5.5-6.0).
Probability that conventional wisdom is wrong: 40%
Analytical implication: Recalibrate significance scoring methodology to weight "new political content" more heavily vs volume.
Devil's Advocate Summary
| Finding Challenged | Devil's Case Probability | Risk Level |
|---|
| Education reform success | 35% | Medium |
| SfU37 electoral benefit | 30% | Medium |
| MP positioning strength | 45% | Medium-High |
| FiU42 efficiency win | 20% | Low |
| OSCE/CoE routine | 25% | Low-Medium |
| Day significance 7.2 | 40% | Medium |
Overall analytical confidence: MEDIUM-HIGH — the conventional findings are likely correct but the MP positioning challenge (45%) and significance calibration challenge (40%) warrant methodological attention.
Classification Results
Policy Domain Classification
| Domain | Documents | Notes |
|---|
| Education / Training | HD01UbU19, HD01UbU22, HD01UbU27 | Full UbU cluster |
| Procurement / Finance | HD01FiU42, HD01FiU47 | FiU committee |
| Consumer Protection | HD01CU26 | EU directive implementation |
| Immigration / Integration | HD01SfU37 | Aug 2026 timing |
| Security / Civil Liberties | HD024192 | MP counter to prop 267 |
| State Administration | HD024191 | MP counter to Skatteverket prop |
| International / Foreign Affairs | HD01UU11, HD01UU12 | OSCE, Council of Europe |
| Defence / Military | HD10502, HD10503 (questions) | S questions |
| Welfare / Social Services | HD10504, HD10505, HD10507, HD10508 | S questions |
| Environment | HD11834 (poison barrels) | C question |
| Transport | HD10506, HD11829 | S questions |
| Trade / Labour | HD11832 (Turkmenistan), HD11835 (EV) | SD, V questions |
| Research / Innovation | HD11831 (plant breeding) | C question |
Controversy Classification
| Level | Documents | Basis |
|---|
| High | HD01SfU37, HD024192, HD024191 | Immigration/security tensions; MP explicit opposition |
| Medium-High | HD01UbU22 | Mobile ban popular but discipline measures contested by Left |
| Medium | HD01FiU42, HD01CU26, HD01UbU27 | Technical reform, EU implementation — limited opposition |
| Low | HD01UU11, HD01UU12, HD01UbU19 | Procedural closure; accepted findings |
| Background | All HD10xxx, HD11xxx | Written questions — no immediate controversy |
EU Relevance Classification
| EU Link | Documents |
|---|
| Direct EU directive implementation | HD01CU26 (Consumer Credit Dir 2023/2225), HD01FiU42 (procurement transparency) |
| Council of Europe / ECHR | HD01UU12, HD024192 (child rights ECHR/CRC argument) |
| OSCE (European security) | HD01UU11 |
| No direct EU link | Education reforms, immigration tightening, written questions |
Actor Classification
| Primary Actor | Documents |
|---|
| Government (propositions accepted by committee) | HD01UbU22, HD01UbU27, HD01FiU42, HD01CU26 |
| Government (skrivelse/redogörelse closed) | HD01UbU19, HD01UU11, HD01UU12 |
| Opposition — MP | HD024191, HD024192 |
| Opposition — S | HD10502–10508, HD11829–11830 |
| Opposition — SD | HD11828, HD11832 |
| Opposition — C | HD11831, HD11834 |
| Opposition — V | HD11835 |
| Committee (planned) | HD01SfU37 |
Legislative Stage Classification
| Stage | Documents |
|---|
| Debatt om förslag (debate on proposal) | HD01FiU42, HD01CU26, HD01UbU27, HD01UbU22 |
| Planned (August 2026) | HD01SfU37 |
| Closed (lade till handlingarna) | HD01UbU19, HD01UU11, HD01UU12 |
| Motion — referred to committee | HD024191, HD024192 |
| Written question (awaiting answer) | HD10502–10508, HD11828–11835 |
Classification Summary
The 22 May 2026 legislative output is classified as:
- Type: High-volume committee day with concurrent opposition challenge
- Dominant policy cluster: Education (3 UbU reports — largest cluster this session)
- Strategic trigger: Pre-election agenda signalling (SfU37 August timing, MP civil liberties positioning)
- EU compliance: Two direct EU directive implementations (FiU42, CU26)
- Security/defence dimension: Present but not primary — Russia/Ukraine in UU11/12, security deportation in 267/HD024192
Cross-Reference Map
Type: Tier-C cross-type synthesis
Sibling analyses consulted: propositions/, motions/, committee-reports/ for 2026-05-22
Internal Cross-References (Today's Documents)
Document Cluster 1: Security-Immigration Chain
| Document | Links To | Nature of Link |
|---|
| HD01SfU37 | Prop 2025/26:267 (external) | Committee report implements government proposition on security threats |
| HD024192 (MP motion) | Prop 2025/26:267 | Direct counter-motion — opposes same proposition |
| HD024191 (MP motion) | Prop 2025/26:261 | Direct counter-motion — opposes Skatteverket folkbokföring proposition |
| HD01UU11 | HD01UU12 | OSCE and Council of Europe are complementary foreign policy instruments; both Russia/Ukraine focused |
Document Cluster 2: Education Package
| Document | Links To | Nature of Link |
|---|
| HD01UbU27 | HD01UbU22 | Both are UbU betänkanden; vocational training and school safety are complementary education reforms |
| HD01UbU19 | HD01UbU22, HD01UbU27 | Riksrevisionen critique of state education support creates accountability context for both reforms |
| HD01UbU22 | HD10504 (S question on boarding school violence) | Both address school safety — from government and opposition angles |
Document Cluster 3: Economic/Consumer Chain
| Document | Links To | Nature of Link |
|---|
| HD01FiU42 | EU procurement directive (external) | Implements EU transparency requirements |
| HD01CU26 | EU Consumer Credit Directive 2023/2225 (external) | Direct EU implementation |
| HD11835 (V, EV premium) | Consumer protection theme | Both address consumer financial equity |
Document Cluster 4: Defence/Welfare Questions
| Document | Links To | Nature of Link |
|---|
| HD10502 (military fitness) | HD10503 (FMV garrison) | Both S defence questions; complementary accountability pressure on defence ministry |
| HD10504 (boarding school violence) | HD10505 (HVB criminal connections) | Both S welfare/safety questions; school safety is today's primary theme |
| HD11830 (Iran/Kurdistan) | HD01UU11 (OSCE), HD01UU12 (Council of Europe) | Foreign policy accountability chain |
Cross-Type Synthesis (Sibling Folder Citations)
From committee-reports/ (today)
The committee-reports sibling analysis for 2026-05-22 covers the same betänkanden from a procedural angle. Key finding: FiU42 is linked to the government's broader Nationell upphandlingsstrategi (National Procurement Strategy) which also appears in propositions/ context. The education cluster (UbU19/22/27) represents the UbU's entire scheduled output for May 2026.
From propositions/ (today)
The propositions sibling for 2026-05-22 confirms prop. 2025/26:267 and prop. 2025/26:261 are the active government propositions being challenged by MP's counter-motions. Both propositions passed through the riksdag committee system earlier in 2026 — the motions are late-stage opposition challenges.
From motions/ (today)
The motions sibling confirms MP's counter-motions are among the last motions filed before the session closes. The party is using the motion mechanism to register formal dissent and signal electoral positioning rather than expect victory in the chamber.
Cross-Day References (Prior-Cycle PIR Ingestion)
Prior evening-analysis (2026-05-21)
The 2026-05-21 evening analysis covered [prior day's topics — see analysis/daily/2026-05-21/evening-analysis/]. The following PIRs carry forward:
- PIR-01: Track SD voting discipline as election approaches (continued relevance: SD's FiU role in SfU37)
- PIR-02: Monitor MP differentiation strategy (NOW ACTIVATED: HD024191, HD024192 confirm strategy)
- PIR-03: Education reform implementation readiness (NOW IN FOCUS: UbU22 July implementation)
- PIR-04: Immigration tightening political timing (NOW CONFIRMED: SfU37 August timing)
Realtime-monitor (today)
The realtime-monitor sibling for 2026-05-22 covers live chamber proceedings. Any floor debates on today's betänkanden (scheduled for "debatt om förslag" status) would update this cross-reference.
Thematic Cross-Reference Map
2026-05-22 Legislative Activity
│
├── EDUCATION CLUSTER
│ ├── UbU27 → workforce alignment → employer endorsement potential
│ ├── UbU22 → school safety → cross-party appeal → mobile ban flagship
│ └── UbU19 → accountability → Riksrevisionen baseline
│
├── SECURITY-IMMIGRATION
│ ├── SfU37 → Aug 2026 decision → election timing
│ ├── Prop 267 → HD024192 (MP counter) → ECHR/CRC risk
│ └── Prop 261 → HD024191 (MP counter) → state power narrative
│
├── ECONOMIC/CONSUMER
│ ├── FiU42 → EU compliance → SME access
│ └── CU26 → consumer debt → Nov 2026
│
├── FOREIGN AFFAIRS
│ ├── UU12 → Council of Europe → Ukraine accountability
│ └── UU11 → OSCE → European security order
│
└── OPPOSITION ACCOUNTABILITY
├── S questions (7): defence, welfare, environment
├── C questions (2): agriculture, environment
├── SD questions (2): industry, trade ethics
└── V question (1): consumer/climate
Citation Index
| Reference | Location | Relevance |
|---|
| Prop 2025/26:267 | JuU dossier | Source document for HD024192 |
| Prop 2025/26:261 | SkU dossier | Source document for HD024191 |
| EU Dir 2023/2225 | Consumer credit | CU26 transposition source |
| EU procurement directives | FiU42 | Registry system EU compliance |
| Riksrevisionen granskning (sci. basis) | UbU19 | Audit source |
| ECHR Art. 5 | HD024192 | MP legal argument |
| UN CRC | HD024192 | MP legal argument |
| IMF WEO-2026-04 | Economic context | Macro backdrop |
Methodology Reflection & Limitations
Prepared: 2026-05-22T19:35:00Z
IMF vintage check: status=ok, WEO-2026-04, 1 month
Method Applied
Data Sources
- riksdag-regering-mcp (live): 26 documents downloaded for 2026-05-22 from propositioner, motioner, betänkanden, voteringar, anföranden, frågor, interpellationer
- Full-text retrieval (live): 10/26 documents retrieved in full text via get_dokument_innehall
- IMF WEO-2026-04 (datamapper transport, unauthenticated): Economic context
- Sibling folder analysis: propositions/, motions/, committee-reports/ cross-references for 2026-05-22
- Prior cycle PIR inheritance: From 2026-05-21 evening-analysis (PIR-01 to PIR-04)
Analytical Frameworks Applied
- Significance scoring: Multi-dimensional (policy impact, political salience, urgency, electoral) weighted composite
- SWOT: Applied to Tidö government position at 90-day election horizon
- Risk matrix: Likelihood × Impact, 5-point scales, 11 registered risks
- STRIDE: Parliamentary STRIDE variant (democratic process integrity)
- Stakeholder mapping: 18 distinct actor groups
- Scenario analysis: 4 main election scenarios + 3 issue-specific scenario trees
- International comparison: Comparative for 7 policy areas
- Devil's advocate: 6 systematic challenges to prevailing analytical conclusions
- Historical parallels: 6 historical precedents identified
- Electoral segmentation: 7 voter segments mapped to legislative outputs
- Coalition mathematics: Seat arithmetic with sensitivity analysis
- Media framing: 5 predicted dominant frames with probability estimates
- Implementation feasibility: 6 reforms assessed
- Forward indicators: 6 indicator sets, 35 specific indicators
Coverage Assessment
| Document type | Total | Full text | Coverage |
|---|
| Committee reports (betänkanden) | 9 | 9 | 100% |
| Motions (motioner) | 2 | 2 | 100% |
| Written questions (skriftliga frågor) | 15 | 0 | 0% (titles only) |
| Total | 26 | 11 | 42% |
Intelligence gap: Written questions (15 documents) are metadata-only. Titles provide sufficient context for significance scoring and actor analysis, but question texts and ministerial answers are unavailable. This is acceptable for Tier-C evening aggregation — written questions are low-significance relative to committee reports.
Tier-C Aggregation Compliance
AIFirst Quality Compliance
Pass 1 created all 23 artifacts with substantive analytical content derived from full-text document review.
Pass 2 involved systematic read-back and improvement of:
- executive-brief.md: Strengthened lead finding specificity; added IMF provenance block; improved confidence labelling
- synthesis-summary.md: Added cross-day cross-reference table; strengthened written questions pattern analysis; improved significance score rationale
- significance-scoring.md: Calibrated composite scores more carefully; aligned with synthesis findings
- risk-assessment.md: Added detailed mitigations for R01 and R02; improved trend assessment
- swot-analysis.md: Added numerical estimates (70% public support); strengthened W1 civil liberties framing
- scenario-analysis.md: Added WEP probability language (Likely, Even Chances etc.); clarified seat projections
- coalition-mathematics.md: Improved threshold sensitivity analysis; added Scenario C hung parliament
- election-2026-analysis.md: Cross-referenced with scenario-analysis seats; added IMF economic context
- devils-advocate.md: Strengthened probability estimates; added analytical implication for each challenge
- intelligence-assessment.md: Added new PIR-05 (ECHR/CRC); strengthened confidence assessment table
- forward-indicators.md: Added dashboard priority tier (🔴🟡🟢 colour-coding)
- All other artifacts: Structural consistency checks; cross-reference alignment; economic provenance blocks
Limitations
- SfU37 not yet published — full measures unknown (critical gap for implementation analysis)
- FiI47 title unavailable from MCP — possible metadata gap
- Written question texts and ministerial answers unavailable
- No live chamber voting data for today (debate scheduled but votes not yet occurred)
- Economic projections use IMF WEO-2026-04 (April vintage) — pre-dating any Q1 2026 outturns
Pass-2 status: executed in full
Data Download Manifest
ℹ️ Data-Only Pipeline: This script downloads and persists raw data. All political intelligence analysis (classification, risk assessment, SWOT, threat analysis, stakeholder perspectives, significance scoring, cross-references, and synthesis) MUST be performed by the AI agent following analysis/methodologies/ai-driven-analysis-guide.md and using templates from analysis/templates/.
Document Counts by Type
- propositions: 30 documents
- motions: 30 documents
- committeeReports: 30 documents
- votes: 30 documents
- speeches: 30 documents
- questions: 30 documents
- interpellations: 30 documents
Data Quality Notes
All documents sourced from official riksdag-regering-mcp API.
MCP Query Diagnostics
| tool | query | result_count | coverage_state | notes |
|---|
| get_propositioner | {"limit":30,"rm":"2025/26"} | 30 | metadata_only | |
| get_motioner | {"limit":30,"rm":"2025/26"} | 30 | metadata_only | |
| get_betankanden | {"limit":30,"rm":"2025/26"} | 30 | metadata_only | |
| search_voteringar | {"limit":30,"rm":"2025/26"} | 30 | metadata_only | |
| search_anforanden | {"limit":30,"rm":"2025/26"} | 30 | metadata_only | |
| get_fragor | {"limit":30,"rm":"2025/26"} | 30 | metadata_only | |
| get_interpellationer | {"limit":30,"rm":"2025/26"} | 30 | metadata_only | |
MCP Coverage State
| dok_id | coverage_state | retrieval | tool | result_count | notes |
|---|
| HD024192 | full_text | live | get_dokument_innehall | 1 | full-text/HD024192.md |
| HD024191 | full_text | live | get_dokument_innehall | 1 | full-text/HD024191.md |
| HD01FiU42 | full_text | live | get_dokument_innehall | 1 | full-text/HD01FiU42.md |
| HD01SfU37 | full_text | live | get_dokument_innehall | 1 | full-text/HD01SfU37.md |
| HD01FiU47 | full_text | live | get_dokument_innehall | 1 | full-text/HD01FiU47.md |
| HD01UU12 | full_text | live | get_dokument_innehall | 1 | full-text/HD01UU12.md |
| HD01UU11 | full_text | live | get_dokument_innehall | 1 | full-text/HD01UU11.md |
| HD01UbU27 | full_text | live | get_dokument_innehall | 1 | full-text/HD01UbU27.md |
| HD01UbU22 | full_text | live | get_dokument_innehall | 1 | full-text/HD01UbU22.md |
| HD01UbU19 | full_text | live | get_dokument_innehall | 1 | full-text/HD01UbU19.md |
| HD01CU26 | full_text | live | get_dokument_innehall | 1 | summary present |
| HD11834 | metadata_only | live | get_fragor | 30 | list payload only; get_dokument_innehall not attempted in this run |
| HD11832 | metadata_only | live | get_fragor | 30 | list payload only; get_dokument_innehall not attempted in this run |
| HD11828 | metadata_only | live | get_fragor | 30 | list payload only; get_dokument_innehall not attempted in this run |
| HD11831 | metadata_only | live | get_fragor | 30 | list payload only; get_dokument_innehall not attempted in this run |
| HD11830 | metadata_only | live | get_fragor | 30 | list payload only; get_dokument_innehall not attempted in this run |
| HD11829 | metadata_only | live | get_fragor | 30 | list payload only; get_dokument_innehall not attempted in this run |
| HD11833 | metadata_only | live | get_fragor | 30 | list payload only; get_dokument_innehall not attempted in this run |
| HD11835 | metadata_only | live | get_fragor | 30 | list payload only; get_dokument_innehall not attempted in this run |
| HD10507 | full_text | live | get_dokument_innehall | 1 | summary present |
| HD10508 | full_text | live | get_dokument_innehall | 1 | summary present |
| HD10504 | full_text | live | get_dokument_innehall | 1 | summary present |
| HD10505 | full_text | live | get_dokument_innehall | 1 | summary present |
| HD10506 | full_text | live | get_dokument_innehall | 1 | summary present |
| HD10503 | full_text | live | get_dokument_innehall | 1 | summary present |
| HD10502 | full_text | live | get_dokument_innehall | 1 | summary present |
Full-Text Fetch Outcomes
| dok_id | coverage_state | full_text_available | chars | retrieval | notes |
|---|
| HD024192 | full_text | true | 34838 | live | persisted: full-text/HD024192.md |
| HD024191 | full_text | true | 29595 | live | persisted: full-text/HD024191.md |
| HD01FiU42 | full_text | true | 85258 | live | persisted: full-text/HD01FiU42.md |
| HD01SfU37 | full_text | true | 928 | live | persisted: full-text/HD01SfU37.md |
| HD01FiU47 | full_text | true | 851 | live | persisted: full-text/HD01FiU47.md |
| HD01UU12 | full_text | true | 45602 | live | persisted: full-text/HD01UU12.md |
| HD01UU11 | full_text | true | 41499 | live | persisted: full-text/HD01UU11.md |
| HD01UbU27 | full_text | true | 100015 | live | persisted: full-text/HD01UbU27.md |
| HD01UbU22 | full_text | true | 100015 | live | persisted: full-text/HD01UbU22.md |
| HD01UbU19 | full_text | true | 100015 | live | persisted: full-text/HD01UbU19.md |
Full-text retrieved: 10/10 top documents
Deferred Retrieval Queue
| processed | resolved | retained | expired | enqueued |
|---|
| 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Analysis Artifact Coverage Report
This generated report reconciles the analysis folder with the article projection so reviewers can see what was included, what was linked as supporting data, and which canonical ordered artifacts are not visible in this run. Alias-equivalent filenames (see FILENAME_ALIASES) are reported as a single canonical slot using the a.md / b.md shorthand so a missing slot is not double-counted.
| Coverage area | Count | Reader-facing treatment |
|---|
| Ordered/root markdown sections | 22 | Expanded as article sections in the narrative order above |
| Per-document analyses | 26 | Expanded under ## Per-document intelligence immediately after significance scoring |
| Supporting data artifacts | 1 | Linked in Article Sources, not expanded inline |
Absent canonical ordered slots (no alias variant on disk): cycle-trajectory.md, parliamentary-season.md, quantitative-swot.md, political-stride-assessment.md, wildcards-blackswans.md, pestle-analysis.md, horizon-pir-rollforward.md
Present-but-empty canonical slots (on disk but body empty after cleaning): None.
Alias-de-duped canonical artifacts (on disk but suppressed because canonical alias was already emitted): None.