China News Service, November 25th, a comprehensive report, on the 24th, Sweden's first elected female prime minister, Magdalena Andersson, announced her resignation only a few hours after her historic appointment.

Data map: Andersson.

  According to reports, the Swedish parliament voted on the new prime minister candidate Andersson earlier on the 24th. Andersson was approved by the parliament as the new prime minister and became Sweden's first female prime minister.

As planned, she should formally take office on the 26th and form a new government.

  However, in the vote that afternoon, the Swedish government’s budget proposal failed to gain parliamentary support. The budget proposal was opposed by the ruling coalition partner, the Green Environment Party, which also announced its withdrawal from the minority government.

Andersson was then forced to announce his decision to resign.

By convention, if a ruling party leaves the coalition government, the coalition government will be forced to step down.

  When he announced his resignation less than 8 hours after being appointed, Andersson said: "I understand that this may seem very confusing, and what happened is completely unprecedented. Although the position of the parliament does not seem to have changed, this issue should be tried again. I don’t want to lead a government whose legitimacy may be questioned."

  In 2018, Sweden held parliamentary elections. The center-left camp consisting of the Social Democratic Party, the Environmental Party, and the Left Party won the election. The Social Democratic Party and the Environmental Party subsequently formed a minority coalition government.

In November of this year, Swedish Prime Minister Leven resigned as the leader of the Social Democratic Party and Prime Minister, and the then Chancellor of Finance Andersson became the new leader of the Social Democratic Party and was nominated as the new prime minister candidate.

  The recent turmoil has shown that the rise of the anti-immigration Swedish Social Democratic Party has made it extremely difficult to form a viable alliance.

For a long time, people have believed that this is a two-power competition, one is a relatively unified center-right party, and the other is a group of left-leaning parties led by the Social Democratic Party.

But Sweden’s deteriorating gun crime and immigration problems have fueled the popularity of nationalists.