White Papers Policy Institute: Sweden’s Experiment in Remigration Expands
Sweden’s Experiment in Remigration Expands
Sweden was once the poster child of open-border multiculturalism in Europe. Books were published on its success and the entire world looked to the ‘open borders welfare state’ to prove that the progressive and internationalist worldview was not only practical but led to prosperity. By now everyone knows the Swedish experiment in maximising multiculturalism has failed and for more than a decade has drawn scrutiny not just from the nationalist and national-conservative branches of the right but also from more self-reflective camps of progressives and liberals concerned that Sweden’s dismal failure as the poster child for multiculturalism was discrediting their political vision. After all, it is not good when your multicultural utopia has the highest rape rate, firearm homicide rate, and number of explosions in continental Europe. Now, as I have documented several times for White Papers, Sweden is undergoing one of the most dramatic policy reversals in modern Western history.
Thanks to the X posts of the user Gustav Dahlgren I became aware that Sweden is once again expanding its criteria for deporting non-Western immigrants and thereby expanding remigration. Under the Tidö Agreement coalition government led by the Moderate Party and supported by the Sweden Democrats, Migration Minister Johan Forssell has outlined an ambitious package of twelve major migration reforms to be implemented before the September 2026 election.
Among the most significant is the proposal for a retroactive “bristande vandel” (lacking good conduct) requirement, which could strip residence permits from hundreds of thousands of non-citizens based on behavior dating back to their arrival in Sweden. Combined with plans to abolish permanent residence permits entirely, dramatically increase deportations for criminality, and tighten pathways to citizenship, these measures represent a powerful catalyst for remigration.
This shift builds on years of mounting public pressure over skyrocketing crime, welfare dependency, and demographic change. Due to reforms which I have covered for White Papers over the past two years the Swedish government has managed to radically reduce immigration flows. Recent data from Statistics Sweden (SCB) shows that in the first half of 2025, returning ethnic Swedes constituted the largest group of “immigrants,” surpassing inflows from traditional 21st century source countries like Syria, Iraq, Iran, and Somalia. Non-Western immigration has plummeted and reversed so that net outflows of approximately 20,000 non-European residents per year have been occurring for a couple of years now. To paraphrase Dahlgren in the summation of the data, Sweden in 2026 is already a more European, more ethnically homogeneous nation than it was in 2022. Yet the government’s new proposals signal that this trend is no accident—it is the manifestation of an era of remigration that I have been covered for the last two years when the government first announced its intentions to begin paying non-citizens of non-Western origins to leave Sweden.
Retroactive Conduct Requirements & Hundreds of Thousands of Deportations
In the wide-ranging interview with Svenska Dagbladet published on February 2, 2026, Minister Forssell revealed his intent to override the government’s own investigator and apply the “bristande vandel” rule retroactively. Currently, poor personal behavior and lacking public conduct can lead to the denial or revocation of residence permits, but the new proposal would extend scrutiny to behavior from the moment an individual migrant arrived in Sweden. Examples of disqualifying conduct include chronic alcohol or drug abuse, accumulation of large debts, welfare fraud, associations with criminal gangs, clan networks, or extremist organizations, and public support for movements that “seriously threaten fundamental Swedish democratic values” or undermine the legitimacy of public institutions.
Forssell explicitly noted that this retroactive application could encompass “several hundred thousand” additional individuals compared to a non-retroactive version. The Swedish Ministry of Justice estimates the broader scope would capture a vast pool of long-term residents who have not fully integrated or who exhibit patterns of antisocial behavior. Not to mention those who rely permanently upon the Swedish welfare state and other public services. Critics, including self-appointed “civil rights” groups and administrative courts, have raised concerns about legal certainty, but Forssell argues that guests in a country should “make an extra effort to live respectably and show they want to become part of their new homeland.” While I disagree anyone can simply adopt a “new homeland” this bit of pedantry feels unnecessary compared to the positive enormity of Forssell’s reforms.
This measure dovetails with several complementary reforms:
- Abolition of Permanent Residence Permits: All existing permanent permits will be converted to temporary ones, and the system will be phased out entirely. Temporary permits are far easier to revoke or refuse renewal, creating ongoing leverage for encouraging departure.
- 500% Increase in Crime-Based Deportations: Stricter enforcement of deportation for criminal convictions is expected to multiply removals fivefold.
- Tighter Citizenship Requirements: New language, societal knowledge, and self-support mandates will raise the bar for naturalization.
- Restrictions on Family and Labor Immigration: Reduced quotas and higher thresholds will curb future inflows.
- Enhanced Return Incentives: While not detailed in the interview, these align with ongoing efforts to promote “återvandring” (remigration) through financial and logistical support.
- Potential Retroactive Citizenship Revocation: Forssell hinted at exploring constitutional changes to allow revocation of naturalized citizenship in certain cases.
Taken together, these policies transform Sweden’s migration framework from one of permanent settlement to one of conditional presence, where continued residence depends on ongoing good behavior and integration.
Propelling Remigration
The retroactive character requirement is particularly potent for remigration because it targets non-citizens. Among non-Western individuals present in Sweden (who are 20% of the population) approximately 50% have yet to acquire Swedish citizen. Many arrived during the 2015-2016 migrant crisis or earlier waves from the Middle East, Africa, and Asia. An adult-heavy age structure (primarily 25-55 years old) means few have deep familial roots tying them permanently to Sweden, and a significant portion lack Swedish citizenship despite long residence. Very few of the left’s trite and overwrought excuses about “tearing families apart” or “removing people from their communities” will apply to Sweden’s remigration policies.
In applying conduct standards retroactively, the government can review historical records for welfare fraud, debt accumulation, or associations with problematic networks—issues disproportionately prevalent among certain migrant groups. Revocation of permits would trigger deportation proceedings, but in practice, many will opt for voluntary return to avoid forced removal, especially if paired with generous repatriation grants (currently up to approximately 350,000 SEK, or $37,000, per adult). The conversion of permanent to temporary permits amplifies this effect. Hundreds of thousands who assumed lifelong access to the Swedish welfare state and the right to live in the ordered society that the Swedes constructed for themselves will now face periodic reviews, creating uncertainty that encourages voluntary departure. Combined with stricter crime deportations, this could generate a snowball effect: as initial cohorts leave, community networks weaken, making remaining less viable and prompting further exits.
Recent trends already show this dynamic at work. With asylum inflows at historic lows and net non-Western emigration underway, Sweden is experiencing organic remigration. The new reforms will supercharge it, potentially repatriating hundreds of thousands over the coming decade and raising the ethnic Swedish share of the population from around 65-70% toward 80% or higher.
Lessons from Prior White Papers Recommendations
The White Papers has long argued that remigration is the only viable path to restore Sweden’s social cohesion, fiscal health, and demographic vitality. Our analyses emphasized that half-measures such as modest incentives or limited deportations would fail against the scale of 21st century mass immigration. Sweden’s current trajectory validates much of this earlier work, but opportunities remain to strengthen and accelerate the process.
WPPI’s 2023 article “Sweden Can Only Be Cured by Repatriation” framed the nation’s violence epidemic—record shootings, bombings, and gang crimes—as a direct consequence of mass non-European immigration. It called for halting naturalizations, revoking refugee statuses en masse, and pursuing broad repatriation. The government’s current restrictions on inflows and increased deportations echo this urgency.
Sweden Can Only Be Cured by Repatriation |
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| On September 28th Sweden’s “Conservative” Prime Minister, Ulf Kristersson, gave a speech about the incredibe wave of violence sweeping the nation, he said, in part: | ||||||
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In “Sweden Embraces Repatriation” (2024), WPPI praised the initial expansion of voluntary return support but recommended tripling proposed grants to $30,000+ and launching aggressive media campaigns targeting migrant communities. The state largely adopted these ideas, raising payments to $37,000 and implementing promotional efforts. Yet uptake has been constrained by municipal resistance and exclusion of naturalized citizens.
My further updates in early 2025 highlighted the $34,000-$37,000 grant program but critiqued its caps (e.g., lower amounts for families) and ineligibility for non-Western citizens of Sweden. WPPI suggested making grants available to naturalized individuals in exchange for voluntary citizenship relinquishment, a legally straightforward process under existing Swedish law and not requiring a change to the Swedish constitution, and increasing family payments substantially (up to $106,000 for larger households) to appeal to welfare-dependent groups.
On citizenship revocation, WPPI’s detailed advice in “So You Want to Revoke Their Citizenship?” urges expanding grounds beyond fraud and security threats to include serious criminality, welfare fraud & dependence, and gang involvement. We further recommended taking a page from the United Kingdom’s statutes and allowing the denaturalisation of people who qualify for another citizenship even if they do not actively hold it. This policy would capture second-generation migrants and vastly broaden the scope of remigration. Automatic inclusion of minor children in parental revocations would prevent family separations while facilitating complete household returns.
Further recommendations included time-limited amnesties allowing minor offenders or fraud cases to depart with full grants, construction of high-capacity detention facilities for recalcitrant cases, and legislation to compel municipal cooperation thereby overriding the 130+ localities currently refusing to assist in the government’s remigration goals.
Forssell’s retroactive ‘good character’ proposal aligns closely with White Papers emphasis on leveraging conduct and integration failures for permit revocations. Extending similar logic to citizenship – through the hinted constitutional amendments – would address many hundreds of thousands of naturalised and Swedish born non-Western people(s). Pairing revocations with enhanced voluntary incentives could yield massive voluntary compliance, minimising coercive deportations while maximizing humanitarian outcomes.
Toward a Post-Multicultural Sweden
Sweden stands at a historic inflection point. The Tidö government’s reforms, if fully implemented, could make it the first Western nation to meaningfully reverse Replacement Migration (The Great Replacement) through policy and prove that we do not need to descent into conflict and anarchy to undue the damage to the West. Retroactive conduct requirements and the dismantling of permanent settlement pathways will create powerful push factors, while existing grants provide pull toward dignified return.
To maximize impact, policymakers should heed WPPI’s prior counsel: dramatically scale incentives for families and citizens, broaden citizenship revocation criteria, enforce national uniformity by making local governments participate in remigration, and promote the remigration opportunities relentlessly within migrant communities. With political will sustained beyond the 2026 election, Sweden could achieve remigration on a scale that restores ethnic Swedes as an overwhelming majority in under a generation. Sweden stands a real chance of securing the peace, prosperity, and cultural continuity that Western leadership has so put at risk in the last several decades.





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