Ullsten Cabinet

The cabinet of Ola Ullsten (Swedish: Regeringen Ullsten) was the cabinet and Government of Sweden from 18 October 1978 to 12 October 1979.

Ullsten Cabinet

43rd Cabinet of Sweden
Date formed18 October 1978
Date dissolved12 October 1979
People and organisations
Head of stateCarl XVI Gustaf
Head of governmentOla Ullsten
Member partyLiberal People's Party
Status in legislatureSingle-party minority government
Opposition partySocial Democrats
Left Party - the Communists
Opposition leaderOlof Palme
History
Legislature term(s)1976-1979
Outgoing formationResignation following 1979 general election
PredecessorThorbjörn Fälldin's First Cabinet
SuccessorThorbjörn Fälldin's Second Cabinet

The cabinet was a single-party minority government consisting the Liberal People's Party. The cabinet was led by Prime Minister Ola Ullsten who was asked to form a minority government by the Speaker of the Riksdag after several failed attempts to form an active/inactive majority cabinet. The cabinet was the first cabinet consisting only of the Liberal People's Party since 1932 and is also the only since then (as of September 2018).

The cabinet resigned on 12 October 1979 following the 1979 general election to make way for a coalition majority government led by Thorbjörn Fälldin. The cabinet was succeeded by Thorbjörn Fälldin's Second Cabinet.

Policy

The Swedish nuclear energy program had been enacted by the Riksdag in 1975 which entailed an expansion to 13 nuclear power plants in total by 1985. The Riksdag had also decided that energy policy was to be re-evaluated in 3 years and that the safety of nuclear power was to be investigated. The previous Fälldin Cabinet had instated a committee with the task of evaluating nuclear safety. Minister for Energy Carl Tham was working on drafting a government bill regarding energy policy, with Social Democrats Ingvar Carlsson and Birgitta Dahl following his work closely. Both the Social Democratic and Moderate parties held positive views regarding nuclear power and it was assumed that the government wouldn't have any difficulties passing the bill.

However, following the Three Mile Island accident, everything changed. While Olof Palme, the Social Democratic leader, had criticized the Fälldin cabinet for unnecessarily delaying the expansion of nuclear power in the past, Palme and his party did a complete turn-around on the issue, demanding a popular referendum to decide the future of nuclear power on 4 April 1979.[1] During the remainder of the spring, the parties discussed how a popular referendum was to be performed and what choices voters would have. Eventually, it was decided that voters would be able to pick three choices, all of which revolved around abolishing nuclear power at various rates.

Ingemar Mundebo, the Minister for the Economy and the Budget, was working on a proposal to lower the marginalskatt tax (sv) and enacting an upper limit to the tax. The government expected the proposition to pass with the support of the Centre Party and Moderates. In the spring of 1979, however, the Centre Party voted against the proposal, since they found inconsistencies in financing the proposal. The bill, thus, did not pass.

In December 1978 it was revealed that while Sweden was supporting the East Timor independence movement, the government was simultaneously allowing the export of arms to the occupying Indonesian forces. The Minister for Trade Hadar Cars stated that this was completely allowed.

The government also managed to pass several reforms, such as increased parental insurance, corporate tax reforms and a new education plan (Lgr80). Child corporal punishment was legally abolished during the reign of the Ullsten cabinet.[2]

[3][4]

Ministers

PortfolioMinisterTookofficeLeftofficeParty
Prime Minister Ola Ullsten18 October 197812 October 1979Liberal People's
Deputy Prime Minister Sven Romanus18 October 197812 October 1979Independent
Minister for Foreign Affairs Hans Blix18 October 197812 October 1979Liberal People's
Minister for the Economy and the Budget Ingemar Mundebo18 October 197812 October 1979Liberal People's
Minister for Education Jan-Erik Wikström18 October 197812 October 1979Liberal People's
Minister for Justice Sven Romanus18 October 197812 October 1979Independent
Minister for Health and Social Affairs Gabriel Romanus18 October 197812 October 1979Liberal People's
Minister for Employment Rolf Wirtén18 October 197812 October 1979Liberal People's
Minister for Agriculture Eric Enlund18 October 197812 October 1979Liberal People's
Minister for Defence Lars De Geer18 October 197812 October 1979Liberal People's
Minister for Communications Anitha Bondestam18 October 197812 October 1979Liberal People's
Minister for the Interior Bertil Hansson18 October 197812 October 1979Liberal People's
Minister for Housing Birgit Friggebo18 October 197812 October 1979Liberal People's
Minister for Enterprise Erik Huss18 October 197812 October 1979Liberal People's
Minister for Trade Hadar Cars18 October 197812 October 1979Liberal People's
Minister for Migration and Gender Equality Eva Winther18 October 197812 October 1979Liberal People's
Minister for Energy Carl Tham18 October 197812 October 1979Liberal People's
gollark: If necessary, we *will* destroy the concept of days.
gollark: This is not likely.
gollark: Unlikely. Protocol DEADLOCKING SPECTRA *will* be utilized.
gollark: Use the PotatOS spy drone array.
gollark: I've started up [REDACTED], so apiotransference memetics are being uploaded into the noösphere.

References

  1. Peterson, Thage G. (2002). Olof Palme som jag minns honom. Stockholm: Bonnier. ISBN 91-0-058042-2.
  2. "Sverige först i världen med förbud av barnaga". Sveriges Radio (in Swedish). 2015-04-13. Retrieved 2020-01-16.
  3. "När Ullsten bildade regering". gd.se (in Swedish). 2010-11-28. Retrieved 2020-01-16.
  4. "Ullsten: »Allting vi gjorde var smartare«". Fokus (in Swedish). 2019-01-18. Retrieved 2020-01-16.
Preceded by
Thorbjörn Fälldin's First Cabinet
Cabinet of Sweden
1978–1979
Succeeded by
Thorbjörn Fälldin's Second Cabinet
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