NCP Biggest Party, True Finns Make Huge Gains
The populist True Finns saw their vote rise by 15 percentage points compared with the last election in 2007 to become the third biggest party. The biggest party is the centre right National Coalition, with the Social Democrats in second place. Turnout was up on 2007 in what will be seen as a protest vote against the established parties and the Eurozone bailout.
The Centre party saw their support drop by nearly seven percentage points compared with the last election. Leader Mari Kiviniemi said that the party will now head for a spell in opposition. The Green League also lost support. Party chair Anni Sinnemäki said that the Greens, too, would begin the new parliamentary term in opposition.Final Results:
National Coalition Party: 20.4% - 44 seats (down 6)
Social Democratic Party: 19.1% - 42 seats (down 3)
True Finns: 19.0% - 39 seats (up 33, from 4% and 6 seats in 2007)
Centre Party: 15.8% - 35 seats (down 16)
Left Alliance: 8.1% - 14 seats (down 3)
Green League: 7.2% - 10 seats (down 5)
Swedish People’s Party: 4.3% - 9 seats (no change)
Christian Democrats: 4.0% - 6 (down 1)
Pirate Party: 0.4% - 0 seats
Others: 1.6% - 1 seat
Government formation is expected to be difficult, with True Finns’ leader Timo Soini driving a hard bargain on support for Eurozone economies. Social Democrat chair Jutta Urpilainen, nevertheless, said that the populist True Finns deserved a place in government after their strong showing in the ballot.
YLE pundit Risto Uimonen agreed, stating that there was no way the True Finns could now be left out of the negotiations on forming a new government. He warned, though, that the negotiations would be harder than at any time since the 1970s.
The results mark the first time the National Coalition party have ever won the most support in a Finnish election. The government parties as a whole, however, lost 28 seats altogether.
BBC article
Well, that was a whopper. I knew the True Finns were going to gain big, but that was practically a massacre. The negotiations for forming a government and the power dynamics for the next four years are going to be interesting, to say the least...Nationalist True Finns make gains in Finland vote
A nationalist party has taken nearly a fifth of votes in Finland's general election, the electoral commission says.
The True Finns finished just behind the conservative NCP and the Social Democrats on around 19%.
While the Social Democrats have called for changes on EU bail-outs, including the planned Portuguese rescue, True Finns opposes the plans altogether.
A hostile Finnish government could theoretically veto the package.
Unlike other eurozone countries, Finland's parliament can vote on whether to approve the measures.
Correspondents say the increased sway of eurosceptics in Finland's parliament could hold up any further bail-out deals.
'Invitation to talks'
The anti-immigration True Finns won 39 seats in the 200-member parliament, final results showed.
That put it five seats behind the conservative National Coalition Party (NCP) - part of the current centre-right government and a strong advocate for European integration - and just three behind the opposition Social Democrats.
The Centre Party of outgoing Prime Minister Mari Kiviniemi - previously the largest party in parliament - won just 35 seats, down 16 from the last election in 2007.
The strong showing for the True Finns meant the anti-euro party would at least "get an invitation to talks" on a new government, Reuters quoted party leader Timo Soini as saying.
Finland is currently governed by an EU-friendly four-party coalition led by the Centre Party and the NCP.
"The bigger parties have no reason to invite the True Finns into any coalition if they can make up the numbers without them," Olavi Borg, professor emeritus in political sciences, told the Associated Press news agency.
EU 'squanderers'
Polling organisations had suggested the True Finns' support would rise to more than 15%, a leap from the 4% they won in 2007.
With its charismatic leader Mr Soini, the party rejects rescue funds for EU "squanderers", as well as opposing immigration.
Analysts say many Finns have become disenchanted with the big three mainstream parties who have run the country for decades.
"Whether the True Finns will really [emerge] as champions of the elections is still uncertain but I think we will clearly get a more nationalistic, more conservative, less European-oriented government in Finland," ING senior economist Carsten Brzeski told Reuters news agency.
Polling stations in the nation of 5.3 million people opened at 0900 (0600 GMT) and closed at 2000.