The opposition parties in Iceland met this morning to discuss an anti-government grand alliance if votes are favourable following the elections. They have a sent a joint declaration of intent to the press. The discussions were the brainchild of The Pirate Party who held a press conference ten days ago to state that they would not be going into coalition with either of the current two governing parties, the centre-right Independence Party (‘Sjálfstæðisflokkurinn’) and the centrist Progressive Party (‘Framsóknarflokkurinn’). Instead, the Pirates sent a letter to a leaders of the three other opposition parties currently with MPs in the Icelandic Parliament (‘Alþingi’) and to the brand-new Regeneration (‘Viðreisn’) party, inviting them to pre-election coalition talks. Iceland's Pirates gun for anti-government grand alliance Today's press statement says that "We believe a coaliton between these parties offers a clear choice to the current governing parties, a choice that we believe will create new opportunites for Icelandic society." This is an unprecedented step as Icelandic parties have generally stood for elections alone without committing to any other party, with coalition talks taking place only once the results are in
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October 2017
CategoriesElection 2016 ResultsInvalid/blank votes 5,574 In brief | Pirate Party
What: A pro-free speech, anti-authoritarian political party in Iceland Formed: 2012 Founders: A group of anarchists, hackers and internet-freedom activists Leader: The party eschews formal leaders but Birgitta Jonsdottir is the most senior of three Pirate lawmakers in Iceland’s parliament Pirate policies “I would like everybody in Iceland to find the pirate within, because the pirate within really represents change and a collective vision for the future.” - Birgitta Jonsdottir, Pirate Party lawmaker |