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This Article is From Apr 19, 2015

Finns Vote, Expected to Oust Government

Finns Vote, Expected to Oust Government
Juha Sipil, chairman of the Centre Party, campaigns in Espoo, Finland (AFP)
Helsinki: Finns voted today in legislative elections expected to oust the coalition left-right government after a campaign that focused on how to lift Finland from a three-year economic slump.

Public opinion polls have predicted a resounding victory for the liberal-agrarian Centre Party leader Juha Sipila, a 53-year-old IT millionaire and newcomer to politics.

Polling stations across the country opened at 9:00 am, and were to close at 8:00 pm (1700 GMT) when the results of advance voting by which more than one-third of the electorate cast their ballots were to be released.

Campaigning heavily on his business know-how, Sipila has vowed to get the economy back on track after three years of recession and stagnation, austerity and failed reforms.

"Our country deserves better," Sipila wrote on his blog Saturday. "Politics must be returned to a climate of trust."

Elected to parliament in 2011, Sipila became party leader in 2012 when he was still virtually unknown to most Finns.

In opposition since 2011, the Centre Party has recently been credited with around 24 percent of support.

Voters interviewed at the polls agreed the economy was top priority.

"The main point in this election is the bad economic situation in Finland, so I voted for people I believe are experts in the economy," Jorma Mahonen, a 64-year-old voter said after casting his ballot in central Helsinki.

"I leave it to them to find a solution. I don't have the answer myself but there will be some cutting involved," he added.

Rafael Donner, 25, was however less optimistic.

"I don't think this election is going to change much. Society won't accept that GDP can't grow forever," he said.

"I believe we in Finland have enough. I look at my friends and they all have iPhones, go on holiday to nice places, and have brunches every weekend," he said.

If a Centre victory is confirmed on Sunday, Sipila's first task will be to pick his coalition partners. Tradition dictates that the largest party takes the post of prime minister and forms a government with the other largest parties to obtain a majority in parliament.

Several weeks of thorny negotiations are expected before Sipila is able to present a coalition.

Faced with the country's economic woes, "the government programme will be quite difficult to create," Helsinki University political history professor Juhana Aunesluoma predicted.

Three parties are fighting for second place, hovering between 14 and 17 percent in the polls: Prime Minister Alexander Stubb's conservative National Coalition Party, the Social Democrats and the right-wing eurosceptic Finns Party.

'Need bold solutions' 

Sipila has not revealed which parties he would like to see join his future coalition.

But he has insisted that the next government be able to cooperate smoothly to push through its policies -- contrary to the discord that has deadlocked Stubb's four-party coalition.

"We need new entrepreneurship and new jobs in the whole of Finland. We need bold solutions (and) goal-oriented leadership," Sipila said.

He has vowed to create 200,000 private sector jobs in 10 years, at a time when unemployment is at its highest level since 2003 at 9.2 percent.

The Finnish vote will be closely watched in Brussels: the Centre has a strong eurosceptic faction, and the Finns Party is fiercely opposed to what it considers interference in Finnish affairs.

"The eurozone is at the moment a catastrophe," Finns Party leader Timo Soini, who is gunning to be a government minister, told AFP in an interview.

"Greece should get out of the euro and devaluate the drachma and get their economy on its feet again and maybe later join (the euro) again," he said.

Stubb, who has held the government reins since June, when his predecessor Jyrki Katainen left to join the European Commission, was meanwhile optimistic on the eve of the vote as a projection put his party in second place with 16.8 percent.

"I still believe in the gold medal," he wrote.

Turnout in the 2011 legislative elections was 70.5 percent.
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