Jimmie Åkesson previously launched a proposal for an interactive, public map of convicted paedophiles during the party's day in Almedalen.
What such a map should look like and how long after serving a sentence a convicted paedophile should appear on the map will be investigated further, says Åkesson. According to the SD leader, the map could be designed in the form of an app or through filters for different types of map services.
New “citizen veto”
In the Almedalen speech that he gives later in the day, he attacks what the SD calls the Social Democrats' "forced mixing".
They want to build rental apartments in residential areas and then move people there from problem areas with high immigrant populations.
Åkesson says that one of SD's most important election promises is to introduce a citizen veto, where neighbors will be able to stop, for example, new rental apartments. He is directly targeting the Social Democratic party leader.
Magdalena Andersson: We are acting to stop your forced mixing. If we win the election, my promise to Swedish homeowners is that we will do everything in our power to introduce a citizen veto.
For a municipality to proceed with a project, a qualified majority of the affected neighbors must agree, he says. If 25 percent say no, there will be no new houses.
A: Misinterpretation
Forced mixing is a term coined by the Tidö parties to describe S's new integration policy. However, S has claimed that it is a misinterpretation and that the party has no proposals that are mandatory.
At the same time, the SD leader notes in the speech that the Tidö parties are struggling in public opinion.
"But we know that it is part of our DNA to fight from below and to overcome adversity," he says.
He otherwise devotes a large part of the speech to attacking S and points out former ministers, including Morgan Johansson and Peter Hultqvist, who he believes destroyed what previous generations had built and turned safe societies into "war zones."
"I understand that Jimmie Åkesson is desperate. He is also unserious; he himself has been involved in governing Sweden for four years and the results are not exactly flattering," says S party secretary Tobias Baudin.
The accusations of forced mixing are taken out of thin air, according to Baudin.
"It's a hot topic. We want to have more mixed tenure forms, for example in the Stockholm suburbs, where there will be townhouses and villas at reasonable costs," he says.





