Health Care Party

The Health Care Party (Swedish: Sjukvårdspartiet, SVP) is a political party in Sweden with a focus on healthcare issues. It regards itself as cross-political single-issue party.

Sjukvårdspartiet
LeaderKenneth Backgård
IdeologySingle-issue party (healthcare)
Riksdag
0 / 349
European Parliament
0 / 20
County council seats
51 / 1,597
Municipal council seats
34 / 12,780
Website
www.sjukvardspartiet.nu

The main party is based in Norrbotten, with affiliated regional parties in the counties of Dalarna, Gävleborg, Värmland and Västernorrland.[1]

Health Care Parties hold 51 seats in Sweden's county councils; 27 in Norrbotten, 7 in Västernorrland, 6 in Dalarna, 6 in Värmland, 5 in Gävleborg, They also control 34 council seats in the municipalities of Boden, Bollnäs, Gällivare, Kiruna, Luleå, Pajala, Piteå, Säffle, Älvsbyn and Övertorneå.[2] The Health Care Party participated in elections to the Riksdag in 2006, 2010 and 2014 with limited success, gaining at most 11,519 votes in 2006 and just 11 votes in 2014.[3][4][5]

The six regional parties founded the national party at a conference in Uppsala in 2005. Notably some other regional health care parties have stayed away from the project, such as the health care parties in Värmland, Västra Götaland and Jämtland.

Policy

The party wants to invest 35 billion Swedish kronor more in healthcare with the aim of spending 10% of Sweden's gross national product on healthcare. The party also wants more private involvement in the state healthcare system and wants to reduce the overall rate of tax.

gollark: Great! I'll instruct bee apioforms 8373727272827282828 and onward and not onward.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: Do you play FTL?
gollark: How elegant.
gollark: That's a feature.

See also

  • Social welfare in Sweden

References

  1. "Sjukvårdspartier i Sverige - Sjukvårdspartiet". www.sjukvardspartiet.nu. Retrieved 2019-11-23.
  2. "Valresultat för Kommunvalet: Sverige". valresultat.svt.se (in Swedish). Retrieved 2019-11-23.
  3. "Allmänna val 17 september 2006". data.val.se. Retrieved 2019-11-23.
  4. "Röster - Val 2010". data.val.se. Retrieved 2019-11-23.
  5. "Röster - Val 2014". data.val.se. Retrieved 2019-11-23.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.