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Politics

Independence Party to form Icelandic government

November 2, 2016

Icelandic President Gudni Johannesson said the Independence Party was the "most viable" option to form a government. Party chairman Bjarni Benediktsson has not been officially selected prime minister.

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Island Bjarni Benediktsson ARCHIV
Image: picture alliance/dpa/B. Thor Hardarson

Icelandic President Gudni Thorlacius Johannesson on Wednesday issued a mandate to center-right Independence Party chairman Bjarni Benediktsson to try to form a government.

The Independence Party won 21 of 63 parliament seats in Saturday's election, the largest share of any party in the north-Atlantic island nation. "My decision is to give the chairman of the Independence Party the power to form a government that has a majority in the parliament," said Johannesson. To form a majority, 32 seats are needed in Icelandic parliament, the Althingi.

Island Parlamentswahlen Unterstützerin der Piratenpartei
Despite tripling their number of seats in parliament, the Pirate Party may miss out on a coalition berthImage: picture alliance/AP Photo/F. Augstein

In terms of negotiating a new government, Benediktsson said, "this could take some time because it is clear that two parties would not be enough but I have not given myself any prearranged outcome."

Benediktsson has not yet been officially tapped for the prime minister role, which may give him more room to maneuver in what could prove complex coalition negotiations.

Potential coalition partners could include the conservative Progressive Party and centrist Regeneration Party. The Progressive Party lost 11 seats in Saturday's election, after prime minister Sigmundur David Gunnlaugsson of the party resigned earlier this year after his name appeared in the Panama Papers leak. Gunnlaugsson and his wife were suspected of having an offshore company in the British Virgin Islands. Due to Gunnlaugsson's resignation, Iceland's elections were moved from April 2017 to Saturday. After Saturday's election, the subsequentprime minister, Sigurdur Ingi Johannsson, resigned in response to the poor results for his Progressive Party.

The anti-authoritarian Pirate Party, which won 10 seats, refuses to work with the Independence Party. Three other center-left parties (Left-Green, Social Democratic Alliance, Bright Future) won a combined 17 seats. 

kbd/msh (AFP, AP, dpa)