Sweden appointed the same female PM for the second time this week


The country will be ruled by a one-party minority government

Magdalena Anderson resigned last week after the budget was not passed

Copenhagen (Denmark): Magdalena Anderson, who was appointed Sweden's first female prime minister for a few hours last week, was re-elected prime minister on Monday.

Last week, Anderson was delighted to become Sweden's first female prime minister, but his joy and happiness did not last long, as the ruling coalition was defeated in parliament when it presented the budget to the ruling coalition in the Swedish parliament. Anderson was forced to step down.

In a vote held on Monday in the 349-member parliament, 173 v. By 101 votes, Anderson was elected leader of the ruling Democrats and prime minister of the country. In this poll, 75 MPs chose to abstain from voting. Anderson will now form a one-party minority government. The names of the other cabinet ministers and their accounts are expected to be announced on Tuesday.

When Magdalena Anderson was elected the country's first female prime minister last week, a sense of pride arose among Sweden's citizens, and especially among women, as Sweden is the only country in the world where there is no discrimination between men and women.

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