Right-wing media have championed Sweden’s “low-scale” approach to the coronavirus pandemic as an alternative to stricter government mandates deployed in the United States. On Fox News, pundits argued that Sweden’s policies would allow its population to swiftly reach “herd immunity” and questioned why the U.S. was “locking down” instead. Now that country is rushing to tighten restrictions following rapid increases in cases, hospitalizations, and deaths that are far in excess of those of its neighbors.
Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Lofven announced on Monday a reduction in the limit on public gatherings from 50 people to eight, citing lack of voluntary compliance with health recommendations to the public, after last week announcing plans to ban alcohol sales after 10 p.m. nationwide. “It is a clear and sharp signal to every person in our country as to what applies in the future,” he said at a press conference. “Don’t go to the gym, don’t go the library, don’t have dinner out, don’t have parties — cancel!”
The country’s COVID-19 caseload has spiked dramatically in recent weeks, vastly outpacing its neighbors and approaching that of the U.S., and hospitalizations and fatalities have inevitably followed.
The spread of the virus in Sweden -- and its government’s admission that its voluntary approach to the pandemic isn’t stopping it -- is devastating to the arguments American conservatives made in opposing the implementation of public health restrictions in the U.S.
Since the early days of the pandemic, right-wing commentators have scrambled for any reason not to adopt the recommendations of public health experts, from wearing masks to limiting public gatherings to closing nonessential businesses. Some described the burgeoning crisis through the lens of the culture war, attacking the so-called elites who they claimed were trying to implement painful restrictions not in hopes of preventing mass death, but because they were power-mad tyrants.
Sweden provided a key element of their argument. The country’s response largely turned on voluntary compliance with public health recommendations, with the government never imposing a lockdown and keeping restaurants, bars, gyms, and other businesses open. The result was that Sweden suffered more COVID-19 deaths per capita than similarly situated countries without significantly better results for its economy. But right-wing media figures claimed in the spring that Sweden’s methods were succeeding, and thus that the harsher restrictions put into place in the U.S. were unnecessary and causing economic devastation for no reason.
Fox prime-time host Tucker Carlson, for example, lashed out at Michigan Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer in April, claiming: