Because if only men were allowed to decide again, the Sweden Democrats would have been by far the largest party, the Moderates slightly larger than today and the Christian Democrats somewhat smaller.

Both the Green Party and the Liberals were to leave the Riksdag.

At least if you look at the voter sympathies in the opinion institute Novus' September survey recalculated in the Riksdag mandate.

Here, the right-wing bloc with M, KD and SD would get 203 seats and the red-greens with the Center Party and the Left Party included would get 146 seats.

A right-wing government in a clear majority, in other words.

With supposed proposals for reduced petrol tax, zero immigration and more nuclear power.

He would become prime minister if only women could vote

If you turn the cut and instead only let women vote, S, MP, V and C would get 212 seats - while the right-wing bloc only scrapes together 137 seats.

An even clearer majority government with supposed proposals for wealth tax, more money for welfare and phased out nuclear power.

The Prime Minister would be a Social Democrat - and by all accounts a woman and her name was Magalena Andersson.

Everything points to the fact that Minister of Finance Magdalena Andersson (S) will succeed Stefan Löfven (S) as party leader for the Social Democrats.

She already has a majority of the representatives behind her, she is the only candidate mentioned and other possible candidates have declined and instead proposed her.

That in that situation she would go out and say No thank you!

seems today completely unthinkable.

Women vote more red-green

So if only women were allowed to vote, the prime minister's vote in November would be a "walk in the park" for Magdalena Andersson.

In addition, her support party, the Green Party, would remain in the Riksdag by a good margin.

However, Nyamko Sabuni's Liberals would leave.

Women therefore vote more red-green.

All parties on that side, including the Center Party, have significantly more women than men as sympathizers.

On the right, it is the Sweden Democrats who stand out.

Nearly a third of the party's sympathizers are women, according to Novus.

Both the Moderates and the Christian Democrats have about as many women as men among their sympathizers.

And if you go down in age, the trend becomes even clearer.

There, young women pull even more to the left and young men to the right.

The parties on the left thus need to attract men back to achieve success in the election next year, and this applies not least to the Social Democrats, who would be a 30 percent party again if men came back.

Here, the party has tried with a tougher tone in the migration debate and in matters of law and order, but so far has not succeeded in anything further.

Several water dividers

On the right, an attempt was noticed by the Sweden Democrats ahead of the 2018 election to attract more women through the campaign "Women of Reality".

The party also changed its view of abortion.

But neither do those attempts seem to have had any major impact. 

The issues that are pointed out as watersheds where men pull to the right and women to the left are climate, gender equality and migration.

This is how it looks in the world's most equal country after a hundred with female suffrage.