About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 26. Chapters: Left Party (Sweden) politicians, Zeth Hoglund, Lars Ohly, Forest and Farm Workers Union of Sweden, Gudrun Schyman, Dror Feiler, Nils Flyg, Torbjorn Tannsjo, Ali Esbati, Farm Workers Union of Smaland, Hilding Hagberg, America Vera Zavala, Asa Linderborg, Jonas Sjostedt, Jens Holm, C.-H. Hermansson, Democratic Farmers League of Sweden, Sven Linderot, Trade Union Propaganda League, Lars Werner, Karin Svensson Smith, Sermin Ozurkut, Rossana Dinamarca, Eva Bjorklund, Lars Backstrom, Ulla Hoffmann, Amineh Kakabaveh, Tove Fraurud, Hanna Zetterberg Struwe, Marianne Berg, Elina Linna, Murad Artin, Alice Astrom, Per Rosengren, Josefin Brink, Lena Olsson, Sven-Erik Sjostrand, Peter Pedersen, Wiwi-Anne Johansson, Lennart Gustavsson, Kjell-Erik Karlsson, Camilla Skold Jansson, LiseLotte Olsson, Rolf Olsson, Britt-Marie Danestig, Tasso Stafilidis, Gunilla Wahlen, Ulla Andersson, Mats Einarsson, Karin Thorborg, Lennart Beijer, Berit Johannesson, Kalle Larsson, Kent Persson, Ingrid Burman, Eva Olofsson, Marie Engstrom, Sten Lundstrom, Anders Wiklund, Owe Hellberg, Siv Holma. Excerpt: The Left Party (Swedish: , V) is a socialist and feminist political party in Sweden, from 1967 to 1990 known as the Left Party - The Communists (Vansterpartiet kommunisterna, VPK). On welfare issues, the party opposes privatizations. Moreover, the party opposes Swedish membership of the European Union and advocates increased public expenditure. From 1998 to 2006, Vansterpartiet was in an arrangement with the ruling Social Democrats and the Greens and until 2006 supported the Social Democratic minority government in the Swedish parliament, as well as in many of Sweden's counties and municipalities. The Left Party is a member of the Nordic Green Left Alliance. The Left Party claim that Sweden does not have social equality in regard to gender. The party t...