Sweden's Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson arrives for a EU Summit at the EU headquarters in Brussels, on March 19, 2026. European Union leaders meet in the context of the US-Israeli war against Iran that is consuming the Middle East, and its consequences on energy prices and security.
Sweden’s government on Tuesday said it would put forward a bill introducing a requirement for migrants to adhere to an “honest living” or face deportation.
The country’s right-wing government, which came into power in 2022 vowing to get tough on immigration, is currently trying to rapidly push through a slew of reforms in various areas ahead of legislative elections in September.
The new requirement would make it easier to withdraw residence permits for migrants.
“Following laws and rules is a given, but it must also be a given that we do our best to live responsibly and not harm our country,” Migration Minister Johan Forssell told a press conference.
“If, for example, you ignore paying your debts, if you don’t comply with decisions from Swedish authorities, if you cheat the benefits system, if you cheat your way to a Swedish residence permit… then you do not have the right to be here,” Forssell said.
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Other examples the government cited as examples included working without paying taxes or not paying fines.
“Statements — that is, things a person says or expresses — should not in themselves be regarded as evidence of lack of honest living, but they may be an indication of, for example, links to violent extremism, which can then be a sign of deficient character,” Ludvig Aspling, migration policy spokesman for the anti-immigration Sweden Democrats which is propping up the government, told reporters.
The government was also proposing that residence permits could be revoked in more unrelated situations, such as in cases of migrants being considered a threat or if they were discovered to have lied on their applications.
If passed by parliament, the changes would go into effect on July 13.
AFP
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