Tove Lifvendahl

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Tove Lifvendahl, 2019

Tove Lifvendahl (born 1974) is Swedish writer, speaker and political commentator affiliated with the Moderate Party.

Early life and education[]

Lifvendahl is an adoptee from Korea.[1] She grew up in Hälsingland and graduated from Uppsala University.

Career[]

In 2000, Lifvendahl was elected national chair of the Moderate Youth League, the youth-wing of the Moderate Party.[2]

She was very successful in attracting media attention to the Moderate Youth League, but also led the failed campaign in 2002 which saw the Moderate share of first-time voters decrease from 30% to 13%. On the day of the election she called for older politicians to resign and make room for younger, more modern Moderates. This contributed to, among others, Per Unckel leaving front-line politics.

After Lifvendahl's resignation from MUF in 2002 she became the first Moderate Youth League chairman to be re-elected to the board of the party on her own mandate, a position she left in 2005. During the party congress of 2005 she opposed proposals for a more lenient view of trade unions.

Lifvendahl has contributed to many publications, among them her own book on former Moderate leader Gösta Bohman.

In 2013, she became Political Editor-in-chief of Svenska Dagbladet, a position she has held since.

Other activities[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Adoptions to Sweden". Embassy of Sweden to Seoul. Archived from the original on 2015-09-14. Retrieved 2015-10-24.
  2. ^ Tove Lifvendahl, Realtid.se 2005-06-09 (in Swedish)
  3. ^ Membership Trilateral Commission.

External links[]

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