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Finland’s left-wing PM Sanna Marin concedes defeat as right-wing NCP claims election victory

  • ‘We got the biggest mandate,’ NCP leader Petteri Orpo said in a speech to followers, vowing to ‘fix Finland’ and its economy
  • Marin, 37, is considered by fans as a role model for progressive new leaders, but she has faced criticism for her partying and her government’s public spending

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Sanna Marin, leader of the Social Democrats, at the Parliament Building in Helsinki, Finland on Sunday. Photo: Bloomberg
Reuters

Finland’s left-wing Prime Minister Sanna Marin conceded defeat on Sunday in the Nordic country’s parliamentary election as the opposition right-wing National Coalition Party (NCP) claimed victory in a tightly fought contest.

The pro-business NCP was expected to win 48 of the 200 seats in parliament, narrowly ahead of the nationalist Finns Party with 46 seats and Marin’s Social Democrats on 43 seats, justice ministry election data showed with all ballots counted.

“We got the biggest mandate,” NCP leader Petteri Orpo said in a speech to followers, vowing to “fix Finland” and its economy.

National Coalition Party leader Petteri Orpo speaks at the Finnish Parliament in Helsinki on Sunday. Photo: AP
National Coalition Party leader Petteri Orpo speaks at the Finnish Parliament in Helsinki on Sunday. Photo: AP

He will get the first chance at forming a coalition to obtain majority in parliament as Marin’s era as prime minister was expected to end.

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“We have gained support, we have gained more seats (in parliament). That’s an excellent achievement, even if we did not finish first today,” the prime minister said in a speech to party members.

Marin, 37, the world’s youngest prime minister when she took office in 2019, is considered by fans around the globe as a millennial role model for progressive new leaders, but at home she has faced criticism for her partying and her government’s public spending.

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While she remains very popular among many Finns, particularly young moderates, she antagonised some conservatives with lavish spending on pensions and education they see as not frugal enough.

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