Swiss to vote in referendum on right-wing party’s proposal to limit population to 10 million
Swiss voters will decide on an SVP initiative to cap population at 10 million by 2050, with polls showing 48% support amid concerns over immigration and infrastructure strain.
- Switzerland will hold a referendum in June on whether to cap its population at 10 million until 2050 by limiting immigration.
- The Swiss People's Party, a right-wing party, promoted the petition to trigger the referendum.
- Opponents argue it would harm the Swiss economy and relationship with the European Union, while supporters cite overpopulation concerns.
132 Articles
132 Articles
The Swiss will have to decide by referendum in June whether it is necessary to officially limit the country's maximum population to 10 million.
The measure, if approved, may threaten cross-border agreements with the European Union (EU) and restrict the access of firms to qualified foreign workers.
The populist party SVP is putting an unprecedented proposal to a referendum that would put a "ceiling" on Switzerland's population, even threatening the country's relations with the European Union.
The proposal could jeopardize key agreements with the EU and, according to opponents, paralyze the economy.
The surprising European nation with a radical plan to curb immigration
Switzerland will vote on capping its population at 10 million amid rising tensions over immigration, in a move that could influence voters across the continent – including in Britain. A petition by the powerful far-right Swiss People’s Party (SVP) gained 100,000 signatures this week, enough to be put to a national referendum. It follows a series of proposals and policies put forward in other European nations in recent years designed to restrict …
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