REYKJAVIK: Iceland goes to the polls Saturday in a general election called just months after its economic meltdown, with voters set to snub the party seen as responsible for the crisis in favour of the interim leftist government.
Icelanders are expected to give the cold shoulder to the conservative Independence Party which governed the country for 18 years until it was ousted in January amid massive protests over the crisis that brought Iceland to the brink of bankruptcy.
Public opinion polls have suggested a comfortable victory for the Social Democratic Party, led by Prime Minister Johanna Sigurdardottir, and its junior coalition partner the Left Green Movement.
Icelanders are expected to give the cold shoulder to the conservative Independence Party which governed the country for 18 years until it was ousted in January amid massive protests over the crisis that brought Iceland to the brink of bankruptcy.
Public opinion polls have suggested a comfortable victory for the Social Democratic Party, led by Prime Minister Johanna Sigurdardottir, and its junior coalition partner the Left Green Movement.
Comments