Today, the Swedish Democrats begin their national days in Örebro and they do so with wind in the sails. For the third poll in a row, the Swedish Democrats are the second largest party according to SVT / Novus and land at 21.5 percent, which is an increase of one percentage point compared to October. At the same time, support for the Moderates is decreasing equally, giving a difference of 3.2 percentage points between the two opposition parties on the right.

"SD clear opposition leader"

- The investigation clearly shows that it is SD who is the opposition leader right now. Not just because they have progressed greatly since the election, but also because the Moderates lose, says Torbjörn Sjöström, CEO of Novus.

Despite the upturn, SD has a bit left to its June 2018 peak of 22.8 percent. Even longer, they have become the largest party, the Social Democrats get 26 percent in this survey and are thus almost still compared to October.

If it were elections today, the conservative bloc that Jimmie Åkesson (SD) has talked about since the national laws in 2015 would be three mandates from a majority in parliament. At the same time, the government and their partner parties, the Center Party and the Liberals have dropped from a support of just under 47 percent in the election to 42 percent today.

V goes forward

Another change worth noting is that the Left Party gets its second highest level since the election by 9.3 percent.

- The Left Party is the only alternative left when the Social Democrats have moved to the right to retain government power. For those who want a clearer left-wing policy, the Left Party is there in fairly lonely majesty, says Torbjörn Sjöström.

For the Liberals who held the national meeting last weekend, the measurement is bleak reading. Cancer in public opinion continues and they are firmly parked under the parliamentary block of 3.4 percent.

None of the changes this month are statistically significant.