Thorbjörn Fälldin
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Nils Olof Thorbjörn Fälldin (24 April 1926 – 23 July 2016) was a Swedish politician and farmer who served as Prime Minister of Sweden from 1976 to 1978 and again from 1979 to 1982. From 1971 to 1985, he was leader of the Centre Party.<ref name=NE>Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref>
Upon first taking office in 1976, he was the first non-Social Democratic prime minister in 40 years, and the first since the 1930s not having worked as a professional politician since his teens.<ref name=Wils133>Template:Harvnb</ref> He was also the last Swedish prime minister to not be from the Social Democrats or Moderate Party.
Early life

Nils Olof Thorbjörn Fälldin<ref>Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref><ref name=NYT90>Template:Cite news</ref> was born on 24 April 1926<ref name=NYT90/><ref name=AP>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name=Weinraub>Template:Cite news</ref> in Högsjö parish, Ångermanland. He was the son of the farmer Nils Johan Fälldin and his wife Hulda (née Olsson),<ref name="Uddling & Paabo (1992), pp. 362–363">Template:Cite book</ref> who were involved in agriculturally focused political and civic associations.<ref name=Wils133/> Fälldin grew up in a farming family in Ångermanland.<ref name=NE/><ref name=AP/> He grew up on the family farm in Ramvik, which later became his home as an adult.<ref name=90ar>Template:Cite news</ref> He completed his formal schooling at the age of 19.<ref name=Weinraub/>
Fälldin worked as a sheep farmer.<ref name=NYT90/><ref name=Jasper133>Template:Harvnb</ref> In 1956, he and his wife, as a newlywed young couple, took over a small farm. However, the farming authorities did not approve the purchase, as the farm was considered too small and too run down for production, and so refused to provide farm subsidies. This fight led him into the youth branch of the Swedish agrarian party Farmers' League ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), which in 1958 changed its name to the Centre Party. He and his family maintained their farm throughout his political life, and when he resigned from politics in 1985, he immediately returned to it.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Political rise
Political beginnings

Fälldin entered the Swedish national political stage when he was elected to the Second Chamber of the Swedish Riksdag in 1958 for the agrarian-rooted Centre Party.<ref name=Wils133/><ref name=Weinraub/>Template:Sfn He was part of a younger generation of activists within the party that wished to expand its appeal to urban voters. He was distinguished by his skepticism of social democracy and trade unions.<ref name=Wils133/>
Fälldin lost the seat by 11 votes in 1964.<ref name=Weinraub/> He was then elected to the party board and met with local party organizations, which raised his profile among the Centrists. In 1966 he gained a seat in the First Chamber, where he befriended the leader of the Liberal Party. Fälldin then regained his Second Chamber seat in 1968.<ref name=Wils134>Template:Harvnb</ref> In that election, the Centre Party overtook the Liberals as the second-largest party.<ref name=EG224>Template:Harvnb</ref>
Competing against his rival Johannes Antonsson, he won a party election to became vice-chairman of the party in 1969.<ref name=Weinraub/><ref name=70talet>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Fälldin was able to secure the position without the support of the chairman, Gunnar Hedlund.<ref name=Wils134/> For the 1970 general election, the Centre Party adopted a new platform that sought to expand the party's appeal to the urban working class, and advocated for decentralization and wage equality between industrial and agricultural workers.Template:Sfn The party again came in second, with 19.9%, an increase from the previous election.<ref name=stat>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
In 1971, Fälldin succeeded Hedlund as party chairman.<ref name=70talet/><ref name=Nilsson>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> This made him the leader of the largest opposition party, and thus the frontrunner for prime minister from the nonsocialist bloc.<ref name=90ar/> Also in 1971 he became a member of the new unicameral Riksdag that replaced the bicameral.Template:Citation needed With Fälldin's ascension to the leadership, criticism of the Social Democratic Party increased.<ref name=Nilsson/>
In 1970 and 1971, the Social Democratic government proposed a plan to construct eleven nuclear reactors, which was approved nearly unanimously by the Riksdag.<ref name=Lewin239>Template:Harvnb</ref> However, by 1973, Fälldin adopted a strong anti-nuclear stance due to his interactions with the scientist Hannes Alfvén and the anti-nuclear Centrist politician Birgitta Hambraeus.<ref name=Lewin239/><ref name=Jasper131>Template:Harvnb</ref> Around the same time, the government of Social Democratic prime minister Olof Palme had proposed a plan to develop 15 nuclear reactors by 1985 in response to the 1973 oil crisis, which was opposed to Fälldin's vision of a "green revolution".Template:Sfn The Centre Party was thus the only major political party in an industrialized western country of the 1970s to take an ani-nuclear stance.<ref name=Jasper131/>
Election of 1973

During the 1973 general election, Fälldin held a live televised debate against Social Democratic party leader and prime minister Olof Palme, which were in the process of becoming a staple of Swedish politics.<ref name=Bohlin>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The members of the nonsocialist bloc emphasized different policies. Fälldin and the Centrists pushed for decentralization, while the Liberals emphasized environmental and tax policies, and the Moderate Party placed focus on tax and educational reforms.<ref name=Archer457>Template:Harvnb</ref> Fälldin also accused the Social Democrats of failing to fight unemployment.Template:Sfn Although Fälldin had recently adopted his anti-nuclear stance, nuclear power was not a major issue in the 1973 election,<ref name=Jasper131/> only first becoming a major issue in the time between the 1973 and 1976 elections.<ref name=Lewin239/>Template:Sfn
That year, Fälldin proposed that the party should merge with the Liberal Party, but he failed to gain the support of a majority of party members.Template:Citation needed The Centre Party received 25.1% of the votes that year, their highest share for a Riksdag election up to that point and since.<ref name=stat/><ref name=Bohlin/> Both the socialist and non-socialist blocs each received 175 seats, with Palme's Social Democrats remaining in power due to the support of the Communist Party and winning drawings to end ties.<ref name=Archer396>Template:Harvnb</ref> The difference in votes between the blocs was over 3,700.<ref name=Archer457/>
Election of 1976
During the 1976 election, Fälldin again debated Palme. Although Palme was perceived as a better debater, Fälldin was perceived as a having won more sympathy with voters, contrasting with Palme's aggressive style.<ref name=Bohlin/> In particular, Fälldin emotionally criticized the government's proposed nuclear power program, which has been described as a turning point in the Centrists' favor.<ref name=Weinraub/> This also complicated the non-socialist coalition talks, as the Liberals and the Moderates had supported the government's nuclear program.<ref name=Archer397>Template:Harvnb</ref> Due to this, the Liberals and Moderates placed little to no emphasis on nuclear energy during the campaign, in sharp contrast to its heavy emphasis in the Centrist ads.Template:Sfn The three parties initially agreed to a two-year pause on orders for new nuclear reactors.Template:Sfn
During the campaign, Fälldin's political opponents praised him for honesty and similarities to rural voters, but criticized his lack of foreign policy experience and his inability to understand English.<ref name=Weinraub/> Sweden had a strong economy, which the Social Democrats touted, while stating that the opposition would cut back on the country's expansive welfare programs. The nonsocialists denied that they would remove social benefits, and criticized the country's high direct taxation.<ref name=Archer396/>
In the election, the Social Democrats finally lost power,<ref name=Nilsson/> having governed the country for the past 44 years.<ref name=CH1976>Template:Harvnb</ref> The Centre party's percentage dropped slightly from the previous election,<ref name=Archer397/> garnering 24.1%,<ref name=stat/> and lost four seats, bringing their total to 86.<ref name=Jasper146>Template:Harvnb</ref> The party had seen its share of the vote increase in every election from 1956 to 1973, with a small recession in 1964. The 1976 election would begin a consistent trend of decreases in the party's vote share,<ref name=EG224/><ref name=stat/> and was the last time that the Centre was the largest nonsocialist party.<ref name=Jasper146/> The nonsocialist bloc won 180 Riksdag seats combined, while Palme's Social Democrats and the Left Party obtained 169 seats.<ref name=Archer397/><ref name=CH1976/><ref name=Jasper146/> The non-Socialist parties (the Centre Party, the Liberal Party and the Conservative Moderate Party) formed a coalition government, and, as the Centre Party was the largest of the three, Fälldin was elected prime minister by the Riksdag and confirmed by king Carl XVI Gustaf during a Council of State, being the first person appointed in this manner under the new 1974 Instrument of Government.Template:Citation needed
Premiership
Administration and elections

Fälldin's initial tenure was the first time a member of the Centre Party headed a Swedish government since Axel Pehrsson-Bramstorp's brief government forty years earlier, in 1936.<ref name=Nilsson/> Fälldin and his first government took office on 7 October 1976. It consisted of 8 Centrists, 6 Moderates, 5 Liberals, and the independent minister of justice.<ref name=Archer398>Template:Harvnb</ref> Fälldin appointed Liberal leader Per Ahlmark to the newly created position of deputy prime minister<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and as minister for employment.<ref name=Ahlmark79>Template:Cite news</ref> Moderate Party leader Gösta Bohman became the finance minister.Template:Sfn He also appointed fellow Centrist Karin Söder to serve as foreign minister, making her the first woman to hold that role.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> There were four other women in the cabinet.<ref name=Archer398/> He also made the anti-nuclear Olof Johansson the energy minister.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> Ahlmark left party politics<ref name=Ahlmark79/> in March of 1978, and was succeeded as deputy prime minister by the new Liberal leader, Ola Ullsten.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Two years later, however, the coalition fell apart over the issue of Swedish dependency on nuclear power (with the Centre Party taking a strong anti-nuclear stand), which caused the Centrists to leave the government.<ref name=AE182>Template:Harvnb</ref> Fälldin presented his resignation on 5 October 1978, and was succeeded on 18 October by Ola Ullsten, who formed a minority Liberal government.Template:Sfn<ref name=ElScoxxix>Template:Harvnb</ref> That year, Fälldin also sued Aftonbladet for 1 krona after they published a satirical interview with him from a mental hospital in which they claimed he had schizophrenia. Fälldin claimed that this was illegal, but later lost the case.<ref>Template:Cite AV media</ref>
Following the 1979 election, Fälldin regained the post of prime minister, despite his party suffering major losses and losing its leading role in the centre-right camp, primarily due to public disenchantment with the Centre Party over its compromise on nuclear power with the nuclear-friendly Moderates, and he again formed a coalition government with the Liberals and the Moderates. This cabinet also lasted for two years.Template:Citation needed On 4 May 1981, the Moderates withdrew from the coalition due to disagreements over tax policy. However, they offered tacit support to the government so as not to trigger an early election.Template:Sfn Fälldin continued as prime minister until the election in 1982, when the Social Democrats regained power as the Socialist bloc won a majority in the Riksdag.Template:Citation needed On 8 October 1982, Fälldin was succeeded by Palme.<ref name=ElScoxxix/>
Economic policy

Although their goal was to prove that an alternative to the Social Democrats existed, the nonsocialist governments pursued similar policies.<ref name=AE182/> Fälldin once commented on the similarities in social policy, commenting that, as far as was concerned, "it is hard to see any difference between the Center Party and the Liberal Party on the one hand and the social democrats on the other, when it comes to social responsibility for people."Template:Sfn
Shortly after assuming office, Fälldin's government received requests by many industrial firms for state support. Fälldin at first resisted, but eventually the government began to intervene in various sectors of the economy. Many credits and loans were issued, and in many cases, industries were nationalized.Template:Sfn Under the six years of opposition government, a greater proportion of industries were nationalized than any of the Social Democratic governments.<ref name=AE182/>
Bohman proposed a conservative economic program that would involve reductions in state planning, but Fälldin rejected this.Template:Sfn According to sociologist Gøsta Esping-Andersen, Fälldin's government used "full steam Keynesian economics".<ref name=Yedida31>Template:Harvnb</ref> Fälldin pursued a mix of tax cuts and spending increases, which resulted in Sweden developing unprecedentedly high annual deficits.Template:Sfn However, he also took some steps to decrease spending. Plans were made to decrease part-time pension benefits from 65 to 50% of income. It also increased fees for certain types of medical care and housing, and, following Denmark's model, shifted some management of social services onto local governments. Plans were also developed to reduce sick pay from 90% to 80% of income, intended to be implemented in 1983, but these plans were scrapped following Fälldin's defeat in 1982.Template:Sfn In 1981, Fälldin agreed with the Social Democrats to delay certain tax cuts until 1983, which caused Bohman to resign from his position and pull the Moderates out of the coalition.<ref name=Yedida31/>
Social policy
In 1980, Fälldin was asked for his opinion about women being granted abortion rights in the previous half decade. He stated that he would have preferred a more restrictive abortion law, with exceptions for rape and threats to the mother's life. However, the government did not introduce such a law and Fälldin did not push for it. Nevertheless, the statement resulted in protests due to fears of threats to the existing law.Template:Sfn
Foreign policy
Sweden's relations with the United States had deteriorated during Palme's premiership due to his criticism of the Vietnam War.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The U.S. viewed Fälldin as more pro-American due to him producing less anti-American rhetoric. However, his actual policy did not adopt a strong pro-American shift, and he soon reiterated the government's commitment to Swedish neutrality.Template:Sfn
Fälldin was critical of the European Community (EC), and did not assign a high priority to relations with the organization. He did not want Sweden to form closer ties with the EC, a policy which would be sharply reversed by the Social Democrats in the 1980s.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Fälldin attended the North–South Summit in October of 1981.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Post-premiership

After a disastrous second election defeat in 1985, in which the party received 12.45% of votes,<ref name=stat/><ref name=Wilsford138>Template:Harvnb</ref> Fälldin faced massive criticism from his party. He resigned as party leader on 5 December 1985.<ref name=Wilsford138/> He was succeeded by Söder.<ref name=Nilsson/>Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He then retired from politics. His posts after that time included chairman of Föreningsbanken, Foreningen Norden, and Televerket.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Fälldin was offered the position of a county governor, but he turned the offer down.<ref name=firar>Template:Cite news</ref> Several subsequent Centre Party leaders personally sought his advice.<ref name=90ar/>
Fälldin was the first person to receive a membership card for the organization Template:Ill, founded in 1989. The group sought to lobby against smoking bans and for the rights of smokers. It was thought that Fälldin's involvement would attract more attention from politicians. In 1989, Fälldin and the group's chairman Bengt Öste began the group's first advertising campaign with a press conference.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
Personal life
In 1956, he married Solveig Öberg (born 1935), daughter of the farmer Albert Öberg and Sofia (née Näsman).<ref name="Uddling & Paabo (1992), pp. 362–363"/> They had three children; Eva, Nicklas, and Pontus; as well as several grandchildren and great-grandchildren.<ref name=firar/> Fälldin was one of the board members of the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation in the 1970s.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Fälldin was a pipe smoker, but he quit in 1996 after receiving coronary artery surgery.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In his final years, his health deteriorated, and he was treated for many illnesses, including angina, pneumonia, and dizziness.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He died at the age of 90, on 23 July 2016.<ref name="obit svd">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="obit thelocal">Template:Cite news</ref> The funeral was held on 11 August 2016 in Härnösand Cathedral, and he was buried at Högsjö Cemetery in Högsjö, Härnösand Municipality.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Legacy
During his 27 years as a national politician, Fälldin was generally appreciated in most political camps for his straightforwardness, unpretentiousness, and willingness to listen to all views. His two periods as Prime Minister were far from easy; trying to get three very different parties to work together in a coalition, while Sweden underwent its worst recession since the 1930s.Template:Citation needed Fälldin's popularity came through his image as a simple northern sheep farmer whose political career stemmed from strong moral conviction.<ref name=Jasper133/> Although Fälldin's government was relatively short-lived, Christine Agius credits him with influencing the Social Democrats upon their return to power in 1982.Template:Sfn
Fälldin refused to allow security concerns to rule his life. During his years as prime minister, he lived on his own in a small rented apartment in central Stockholm, while his family ran the farm up in northern Sweden. He did his own cooking and carried out refuse in the morning to the communal dustbins in the backyard, before taking a brisk 15-minute walk to his office, shadowed at a distance by an unmarked police car which had been waiting outside the apartment block; his only concession to the security concerns.Template:Citation needed
While serving as prime minister during the U 137 crisis in October–November 1981, Fälldin is remembered for the simple answer "Hold the border!" ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) to the request for instructions from the Supreme Commander of the Swedish Armed Forces when faced with a suspected Soviet raid to free the stranded submarine.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> During the 2024 European Parliament election in Sweden, the Centre Party used the phrase as a slogan, representing the party's support of stopping imports of Russian fossil fuel and ending EU subsidies to fossil fuels.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
The U 137 crisis was dramatized in the 2024 Swedish satirical series Whiskey on the Rocks. Fälldin was portrayed by the Swedish actor Rolf Lassgård, who was reportedly Fälldin's favorite actor.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
Awards and decorations
- File:FIN Order of the White Rose Grand Cross BAR.svg Template:Flagicon Grand Cross of the Order of the White Rose of Finland (November 1990)<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- File:Den kongelige norske fortjenstorden kommandør med stjerne stripe.svg Template:Flagicon Commander with Star of the Royal Norwegian Order of Merit (1 July 1999)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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Cabinets
References
Bibliography
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Further reading
External links
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- 1926 births
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- Members of the Riksdag from the Centre Party (Sweden)
- Leaders of political parties in Sweden
- People from Härnösand Municipality
- Prime ministers of Sweden
- 20th-century Swedish farmers
- Members of the Andra kammaren