My Take | Finnish PM Sanna Marin’s love of partying and joining Nato two sides of same coin
- The young ages of national politicians of traditionally neutral Sweden and Finland, many of whom have no real experience of Soviet domination, may explain their readiness to join alliance after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine

Some prime ministers love partying too much for their own good. Britain’s Boris Johnson has had to resign, partly thanks to “partygate” in which he was seen having a good time during a Covid-19 lockdown period. The gathering was a real legal offence.
This time, though, she defended her partying, saying she spent her free time with friends just like others her age and she intended to continue being the same person she was. She is 36. When she became prime minister in 2019, she was the youngest top leader of her country, at 34.
The young ages of politicians in Finland and Sweden have caught my attention. It means many of them were either young children or unborn when the Soviet Union collapsed. Could that have something to do with their governments’ willingness to give up their long-standing neutrality and non-alignment by applying to join the North Atlantic Treaty Organization following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine?
In 2019, four out of five party leaders of Marin’s coalition government were under 35. In 2014, Sweden elected its youngest parliament ever, with an average age of 41. In 1991, the year the Soviet Union officially ended, the average age was over 50. The two governments’ decision to join Nato enjoyed overwhelming parliamentary support.
