Finnish coalition at risk after nationalists pick hardline leader

11 Jun, 2017

Finland's eurosceptic Finns party picked an anti-immigration hardliner as its leader on Saturday in a move that the Prime Minister said might lead to a break-up of the coalition government it is part of. At a Finns party congress, 56 percent of its members voted in favour of European Parliament member Jussi Halla-aho, who wants Finland to leave the European Union.
Halla-aho, who was fined by Finland's Supreme Court in 2012 for comments on a blog that linked Islam to paedophilia and Somalis to theft, has said he would push the three-party coalition to tighten immigration policies, and that he would not stick to the three-party government at any cost.
"We must be more aggressive in raising the topics that distinguish us from other parties... it is important to push our priorities forward more vigorously within the government programme," Halla-aho told reporters after his election. Prime Minister Juha Sipila, citing differences in core values, said that there is a risk the centre-right government could break up due to Halla-aho's nomination. "Of course (there's is a risk of break-up). This is a tough spot for the government," Sipila, from the Centre Party, told daily newspaper Helsingin Sanomat.
The third coalition partner, the pro-EU National Coalition Party (NCP) also said it might not want to cooperate. "This requires serious contemplation. The Finns party is not the same party anymore," Finance Minister Petteri Orpo told Verkkouutiset, an online news site. As snap elections are very rare in the Nordic country, a possible break-up of the coalition would likely mean that Sipila would try to form a new coalition.
That could derail healthcare and local government reforms central to Sipila's plan to balance public finances. Sipila is due to meet Halla-aho and Orpo on Monday. Formerly known as True Finns, the party is known for complicating EU bailout talks during the euro zone crisis. But after becoming the second-biggest parliament party in 2015, it joined the coalition government and accepted compromises, angering core voters.
Support for the Finns party has plunged from 17.7 percent in a 2015 election to about 9 percent in a poll this month, amplifying calls from the party grass roots for a tougher line. Mari K Niemi, a researcher at University of Turku, said the party which had sought to represent underprivileged people from the countryside is becoming a more radical right-wing populist party.
"Young, sometimes educated people with anti-immigration focus have become a more significant power within the party," she said, comparing the party's new party profile to far-right Sweden Democrats and France's National Front. Finland is recovering from a decade of stagnation and problems including the decline of Nokia's former phone business. The government has sought to boost growth and curb public debt growth by cutting spending and reforming labour laws. "If the coalition continues, it gets more and more difficult for the parties to agree on anything. And if the government broke up, a new coalition would surely change the current fiscal policy programme," said Nordea analyst Jan Von Gerich.

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