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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
World
Zamira Rahim

'Not a wave, a tsunami': Green parties celebrate historic gains in Swiss election

Green Party leader Regula Rytz (right) takes in the announcement of the first election results in Bern ( AFP via Getty Images )

Support for the Greens surged in Switzerland’s parliamentary election on Sunday in a shift to the left one politician described as a “tsunami” for the political establishment.

While a right-wing populist party remains the country’s strongest, the projected result could dilute centre-right parties’ traditional grip on the Swiss government.

The Green Party and the Green Liberals, a newer centrist party with an environmental focus, appear to have won a combined vote share of 20 per cent. 

“It is not a green wave, it is a tsunami, a hurricane,” said Caroline Vara, the deputy Green Party leader, who won a seat in the upper house of parliament.

Regula Rytz, the Green Party’s leader, said she was “completely overwhelmed”, adding that “it is clear that the population wants greener politics”, according to SRFthe Swiss public broadcaster.

Together the two green parties are expected to gain 26 seats in the 200-seat lower house of parliament.

The parties are now potentially in line to win a place in the Federal Council, the seven-seat governing cabinet.

The seats have been divided among the same four parties in nearly the same composition since 1959.

“The Federal Council in its current composition no longer fits [the changed political situation],” Ms Rytz said.

The Green Party’s vote share appears to have surged 5.6 points, to 12.7 per cent of the vote, the organisation’s best political showing to date.

Green Party president RegulaRytz celebrates with party members (AFP)

And the Green Liberals won 7.6 per cent of the vote from 4.6 per cent previously.

The right-wing and anti-immigration Swiss People’s Party has the largest vote share at 25.8 per cent, but slipped 3.6 points. The SVP had won a record number of seats in 2015 amid Europe’s refugee crisis.

The centre-left Social Democrats won second place with 16.6 per cent of the vote, while the centre-right FDP came in at 15.3 per cent.

Green politicians celebrated the fact that the party beat the centrist Christian Democrat party, which has one seat on the Federal Council.

“The spectacular gains for the Greens are a real surprise, particularly in the French-speaking part of the country,” said Lukas Golder, co-director of the Gfs Bern research institute.

“Swiss voters were concerned about climate issues and want parliament to act accordingly,” he added in an interview with SRF.

In December the two parliamentary chambers will elect the government.

It remains unclear if the Green Party will succeed in winning a cabinet seat. They will need support from other parties to pull off a possible challenge for a seat.

Currently the SVP, the Social Democrats and the FDP each hold two seats in the cabinet, while the Christian Democrats have one.

Switzerland’s presidency rotates between the members of the seven members of the Federal Council on an annual basis.

Additional reporting by agencies

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