Monday November 25, 2024

Vihreät enjoys record high popularity

Published : 18 Aug 2017, 02:17

  DF-Xinhua Report
DF File Photo.

The opposition Vihreä Liitö (Green League) surged to a record high position and for the first time became the second most popular party in Finnish political spectrum, an opinion poll showed on Thursday.

It bypassed both the ruling Suomen Keskusta (Centre Party) led by Premier Juha Sipilä and the main opposition party, the Suomen Sosialidemokraattinen Puolue (Social Democratic Party of Finland-SDP) in a poll commissioned by the national broadcaster Yle.

The Kansallinen Kokoomus (National Coalition Party-NCP) strengthened its number one position and obtained 20.8 percent support.

The Vihreät reached 17.6 percent. The Keskusta was right under the Vihreät with 17.3 percent, with a slight increase from the Yle poll in July.

The SDP declined to 15.9 percent with a drop of 2.6 percentage points.

Analyzing the situation, Jari Pajunen, research director of Taloustutkimus institute that carried out the poll, said on Thursday the Vihreät are now enjoying a positive spiral. Pajunen could not identify any acute reason.

Both the Keskusta and the SDP have shown a long term declining trend, while the Vihreät have shown a trend upwards. "Ultimately the curves will meet," Pajunen said.

The newly split populist Perussuomalaiset (Finns Party) showed a slight increase and reached 8.8 points, while the secessionist Sininen tulevaisuus (Blue Reform) rose to 1.6 percent.

The polls was based on nearly two thousand phone calls and the error margin was 2.3 percentage points.

The political correspondent of Yle Pekka Kinnunen said the Geens are now challenging old political structures, both the ruling centrists and the opposition social democrats.

In the 2015 general election, the Vihreät attained 8.5 percent votes only. Kinnunen noted that while the aim of the Vihreät to get the premiership amused other parties earlier this year, it now causes serious concern. Touko Aalto, new chairman of the Vihreät, is becoming a candidate for premiership in a coalition.

The 2015 voting result still prevails in the parliament, but correspondent Kinnunen believed the political focus is already on the time after the 2019 election.

In the local election in April this year, the Kokoomus and the Green Party were already challenging each other, and both benefited. In Helsinki, they left the Social Democrats outside the top duel.

Kinnunen said it is crucial for the future whether the SDP leader Antti Rinne will be able to benefit from the wage talks in the upcoming autumn. In 2015, Rinne was able to increase support in the wake of a massive protest against Sipila's austerity policies. But the wave later evaporated.