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Libertas Sweden

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Political party in Sweden
Libertas Sverige
Founded3 March 2009
Ideologyanti-Lisbon Treaty
Euroscepticism
European affiliationLibertas.eu
Coloursblue, gold
Website
www.libertas.eu/sweden

Libertas Sweden (Swedish: Libertas Sverige) is a political party in Sweden. It intended to contend the 2009 European Parliament elections under a common banner with Declan Ganley's Libertas.eu.

History

On 26 February 2009, Libertas announced that it wanted to open a branch in Sweden and appealed for the 1500 signatures required to register as a political party in Sweden. The results were submitted to the Valmyndigheten (the Swedish Election Authority) 58 minutes before the deadline expired. The results were not submitted as a list of signatures: instead, a document from a Notary Public certifying that the signatures existed was submitted in its place.

When Libertas Sweden (Libertas Sverige) was set up Sören Wibe of Junilistan stated that Ganley had visited Sweden in January and offered Junilistan 10 million kronor (SEK) to rename the party to "Junilistan – Libertas", and that Junilistan had rejected the offer and Libertas.

Libertas.eu held a press conference on 27 April at which Stefan Kihlberg, the former party secretary of Ny Demokrati (NyD) was introduced as the head of the Libertas list in Sweden.

European Parliament elections, 2009

See also: European Parliament election, 2009 (Sweden) and Libertas.eu

Libertas Sweden intended to contend the 2009 Euroelections on the specific issue of a referendum on the Lisbon Treaty. The policies and core values of the umbrella pan-European party Libertas.eu were on its website or on the main article here.

On 21 May 2009 Libertas Sweden announced that it was ending its campaign, stating that it did not have the resources to cover the cost of printing and transporting ballots.

See also

References

  1. "Hjälp Libertas bli ett registrerat parti Archived 27 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine" Libertas, 26 February 2009, English translation here
  2. "Libertas Sverige blir ett registrerat parti " Libertas website, Tuesday, 3 March 2009, English translation here
  3. ^ "Hemligt kring parti inför EU-val", 6 March 2009, Svenska Dagbladet
  4. ^ "Nytt nejparti ställer upp i EU-valet Archived 4 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine", 3 March 2009, from dn.se, English translation here
  5. ^ "Libertas launches in Sweden", Stockholm, 27 April 2009, http://www.libertas.eu/ Archived 4 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  6. "Vi nådde inte enda fram – den här gången!", 2009-05-21, libertas.eu, English translation here
Libertas
Movement
European political party
Lobby group
European political foundation
  • Libertas Foundation
Timeline
See also
People
Staff
Election advisers
Members of member partiesSee List of 2009 candidates
Members of affiliated partiesSee List of 2009 candidates
Individual members
Disavowed people
Parties
Member parties
Affiliated parties
Czech Republic
France
Germany
Greece
Latvia
Poland
Portugal
Slovakia
Spain
Disavowed parties
Elections
2009 lists
Key
1Member parties are members of Libertas.eu. Members of member parties are automatically members of Libertas.eu unless they choose otherwise.
2Affiliated parties are not members of Libertas.eu but are otherwise associated. Members of affiliated parties are not members of Libertas.eu unless they choose to join as individuals.
3Parties presenting as Libertas.eu affiliates/members but not sanctioned by Libertas.eu when presentation commenced.
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