• Almedalen special: Is Sweden's government toast?
    Jun 26 2026

    This week host James Savage and regular panelist Richard Orange record the podcast from Almedalen, the annual politics fest in Visby on the Baltic island of Gotland.

    They are joined for a lively politics conversation by Henrik Torehammar, a political commentator for the Svenska Dagbladet newspaper.

    Almedalen is sometime criticised as an event for Sweden's elites, but how elitist can any event really be in what Torehammar calls a "bicycle monarchy" famed for its flat hierarchies?

    Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson's Moderate Party is edging towards a disastrous election if polls are to be believed. Can he pull a result out of the fire at the eleventh hour?

    The opposition parties look poised to snatch power. But will some pretty major ideological differences act as a stumbling block for the Social Democrat leader Magdalena Andersson?

    And what issues are likely to dominate in the run-up to the September election. Immigration? Climate? Or could the rise of AI make its presence felt on the campaign trail?

    Here are links to some of the topics discussed in the episode:


    Politics
    • Why are Swedish politicians so silent on AI?
    • Sweden Democrat leader takes aim at Social Democrats in key speech
    • Sweden Democrats launch retro election campaign to make 'Sweden like Sweden again'
    • More than half of voters think Sweden's government will lose election
    • Stay on top of the Swedish election: How to follow The Local's coverage

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    43 mins
  • Legal fight begins on Swedish citizenship rejections
    Jun 24 2026

    Earlier this year the Fair Transition campaign group tried to convince Swedish decision makers to introduce transitional rules for the citizenship reforms which came into force on June 6th.

    Two months have now passed since the Swedish parliament voted against transitional rules by the smallest of margins after the far-right Sweden Democrats sent in two MPs who were supposed to be withheld from the vote.

    So what now for the campaigners fighting on behalf of the 100,000 citizenship applicants waiting in the citizenship queue?

    The Local’s editor Emma Löfgren caught up with the group's spokesman Patrick Gallen to find out more about Fair Transitions plans as they prepare to mount a legal challenge in Sweden's migration courts.

    READ ALSO:

    • Sweden Democrats accused of cheating to block transitional rules for citizenship


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    32 mins
  • What kind of bad conduct could get you kicked out of Sweden?
    Jun 18 2026

    This week we talk about the Swedish culture of long summer holidays and how to make the most of them.

    Also: parliament has passed a law that will make it possible to revoke residence permits for “poor conduct”. Now that it has passed, will you live to regret that speeding fine?

    Why is the government pressing ahead with plans for mandatory ‘language preschools’ for children who don’t speak good Swedish, despite an official investigator saying that the idea was legally and practically difficult, and possibly discriminatory?

    And we look at how the government is finding it ever harder to get its agenda through parliament, as their plans to let 13 year olds go to jail were defeated.

    Host James Savage is joined this week by panelists Mandy Pipher and Richard Orange.

    Here are links to some of the topics discussed in the episode:

    Residency permits
    • Swedish parliament votes to revoke residency permits over 'poor conduct'
    Midsummer
    • Do I get a day off in Sweden at Midsummer?
    • What's open and what's closed in Sweden during Midsummer?
    Politics
    • Sweden tightens residency rules, but opposition's challenge delays child detention bill
    • Closed-doors agreement on Sweden's parliamentary pairing row collapses
    • Swedish government to push ahead with mandatory language preschool despite legal warnings
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    28 mins
  • Sweden's teen deportations – 'I was terrified I wouldn't get a visa'
    Jun 16 2026

    Sweden's teen deportations have affected young people who live in Sweden and whose parents have the right to be in Sweden, but who themselves no longer meet the requirements for a residence permit.

    After sustained public outcry, media reporting and opposition pressure, Sweden's government announced relief measures on June 1st.

    These included the option for young adults who came to Sweden as dependents of their parents to no longer have to leave the country in order to apply for their own permits.

    Once this law comes into effect in October, it will have a big effect on young people like 19-year-old Paola Claudio.

    Despite having lived in Sweden with her family since she was 15 and being in full time studies at Stockholm's prestigious KTH University, she had to interrupt her studies at exam time in order to make a last minute round trip to Mexico or risk being issued with a deportation order.

    The Local’s Mandy Pipher caught up with Paola Claudio in April to learn more about why she ended up travelling all the way to Mexico once she learned she risked being deported from Sweden.

    READ ALSO:

    • Teenager makes round-trip to Mexico to avoid being deported from Sweden
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    5 mins
  • Sweden's Prime Minister rocked by corruption claims
    Jun 12 2026

    This week we talk about a security scandal surrounding Prime minister Ulf Kristersson.

    And with the men's football World Cup kicking off this week, we assess Sweden's chances.

    We also discuss new restrictions on permanent residency and turbulence on the left side of Swedish politics.

    And we have an interview with Liz Stopka from the American Swedish Institute about the history of Swedish emigration to the United States.

    Host James Savage is joined this week by panelists Mandy Pipher and Emma Löfgren.

    Here are links to some of the topics discussed in the episode:

    Politics
    • Sweden's Left Party removes local candidates who praised terror groups
    Sweden and the US
    • Opinion: Do Sweden's deportations have more parallels to the US than Swedes realise?
    Football
    • How can you watch the 2026 men's football World Cup in Sweden?
    Immigration
    • Swedish parliament approves bill to abolish future permanent residency for refugees
    Work permits
    • When will Sweden next raise the work permit salary threshold?

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    Sign up here for their live Q&A session on working in Sweden


    • June 16th session

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    42 mins
  • 'Disappointing and sad': Treasured Swedish museums risk closure over rising rents
    Jun 9 2026

    Two popular museums in Stockholm are at risk of closure because the government agency that owns the properties is now requiring the museums, which are also run by a government agency, to pay market rents that they can’t afford.

    It’s currently unclear if Medelhavsmuseet and Östasiatiska museet will be able to stay open.

    Known in English as The Museum of Mediterranean and Near Eastern Antiquities, and the East Asian Antiquities Museum, the two city centre museums are much-loved destinations for Stockholmers and visitors alike.

    To learn more about their importance, The Local’s Mandy Pipher caught up recently with Ninhursag Tadaros, an Assyriologist and curator who has previously worked with the Mesopotamian collection at Medelhavsmuseet.

    READ ALSO:


    • Why two iconic Stockholm museums might have to close
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    5 mins
  • Why this year's Swedish National Day will be bittersweet
    Jun 4 2026

    This week we look at the government’s solution to teen deportations, and we discuss the new citizenship law coming into force on Saturday, which also happens to be National Day.

    We also talk about how unnerving it can be for foreigners when a young child switches to Swedish before you even properly understand it.

    And for Membership+ subscribers, we talk about the Swedish community in the US and how they keep their Swedishness alive.

    Host Richard Orange is joined this week by panelists Mandy Pipher and James Savage.

    Here are links to some of the topics discussed in the episode:

    Immigration
    • Sweden's house speaker says no to emergency motion on transitional rules
    • Sweden's government announces proposed solution for teen deportations
    • Is the Swedish Migration Agency working overtime to fast-track citizenship cases?
    Politics
    • Citizenship-scandal Sweden Democrat MP quits over child pornography probe
    Family
    • The hardest part of moving to Sweden? Suddenly not understanding my own child
    Sweden and the US
    • The migration crisis that divided Sweden and made it a better country
    Get Membership+ to listen to all The Local's podcasts

    Sign up now and get early, ad-free access to a full-length episode of the Sweden in Focus podcast every weekend, as well as Sweden in Focus Extra every Wednesday.

    Please visit the link that applies to you and get a 40% discount on Membership+

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    31 mins
  • 'Sweden's next migration minister will have a big cleaning job to do'
    Jun 1 2026
    A month ago the parties on the left were poised to win a vote on transitional rules for citizenship in the Riskdag after two independents MPs sided with the opposition. But the Sweden Democrats swung the vote in the government’s favour by getting two of their parliamentarians to breach a longstanding pairing agreement that compensates for planned absences.This week we hear from the Green Party’s immigration policy spokesperson Anna Hirvonen, who has sent an emergency motion to the speaker of the Swedish parliament in a last-ditch attempt to force lawmakers to vote again on including transitional rules in Sweden’s new citizenship law for the more than 100,000 people waiting in the queue.In her conversation with The Local’s Nordic editor Richard Orange the increasingly high-profile Hirvonen also talks about the chokehold she believes the far-right Sweden Democrats have on Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson’s Moderate Party, how the immigration debate is changing after protests over teen deportations, and how she thinks the parties on the left would go about undoing some of the hardline immigration policies brought in by the current government.Swedish terms used in the interview: Utskottsinitiativ - an initiative proposed to a parliamentary committee Ventil - a "safety clause", in this case an immigration law amendment intended to bring an end to teen deportations. Kvittning - The Swedish parliament's long-standing pairing agreement on how to handle votes when members have to be absent for reasons such as illness.Händelsemotion/akutmotion - An emergency motion submitted to the parliamentary speaker, in this case aimed at forcing a revote on the inclusion of transitional rules in Sweden's new citizenship law. Det ska löna sig att arbeta - Working should pay. A Moderate Party slogan about the value of work. Skärpta krav för anhöriginvandring - A legislative proposal on tougher requirements for family reunificationGet Membership+ to listen to all The Local's podcastsSweden in Focus Extra is a podcast for The Local's Membership+ subscribers.Sign up to Membership+ now and get early, ad-free access to a full-length episode of the Sweden in Focus podcast every weekend, as well as Sweden in Focus Extra every Wednesday.Please visit the link that applies to you and get a 40% discount on Membership+For signed-in members: Upgrade to Membership+For new members: Get Membership+ Read more about Membership+ in our help centre. Become a member at https://www.thelocal.se/podcasts/podcast-offer?tpcc=padlock. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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    5 mins