Shouldering the role of party leader seems to have affected confidence in Magdalena Andersson negatively.

In the survey, 40 percent of those surveyed say that they have great or very great confidence in the S-leader, which can be compared with 45 percent in the September survey.

Decreased among bourgeois voters

Confidence has declined above all among moderate voters, but also fell sharply among people who sympathize with the Liberals and the Center Party.

Despite a significant reduction, she still tops the confidence league by a good margin and is also the only party leader who has a positive balance measure, ie more voters have confidence in her compared to those who do not trust her.

SVT's political commentator Mats Knutson believes that one reason for the loss of confidence is that Magdalena Andersson has now become party leader, which gives her a more party-polarizing role.

- How this develops in the future is determined by several things.

It depends on how she manages to push through the government's policy in the Riksdag, how she behaves in debates and hearings, but also in how the political opponents act and how successful they become in pushing her policy down, says Mats Knutson.

MP and L conductors at the bottom

Second on the list is Ulf Kristersson (M), whose confidence figures are 33 percent.

In third place is V leader Nooshi Dadgostar at 30 percent, closely followed by SD leader Jimmie Åkesson at 29 percent.

Ebba Busch (KD) passes Annie Lööf (C) in the November survey and they are now in fifth and sixth place respectively.

At the bottom, the two MP spokespersons Per Bolund and Märta Stenevi are in seventh and ninth place respectively.

In between is also the Liberals' Nyamko Sabuni in eighth place.