Pirates sweep to victory in Euro elections
By Barry Collins and Reuters
Posted on 8 Jun 2009 at 10:54
Sweden's Pirate Party, striking a chord with voters who want more free content on the internet, has won a seat in the European Parliament.
The Pirate Party captured 7.1% of the vote in Sweden, enough to give it a single seat. The party wants to deregulate copyright, abolish the patent system and reduce surveillance on the internet.
PC Pro's own copyright campaigner, Darien Graham-Smith, championed the Pirate Party cause on this week's PC Pro Podcast.
"This is fantastic!" says Christian Engstrom, the party's top candidate. "This shows that there are a lot of people who think that personal integrity is important and that it matters that we deal with the internet and the new information society in the right way."
Previously an obscure group of single-issue activists, the party enjoyed a jump in popularity after the conviction in April of four men behind The Pirate Bay, one of the world's biggest free file-sharing website.
Despite the similar names, the party and the website are not linked. The party was founded in 2006 and contested a Swedish general election that year, but received less than 1% of the vote.
Engstrom credited the party's appeal to young voters for its success. "We are very strong among those under 30. They are the ones who understand the new world the best. And they have now signalled they don't like how the big parties deal with these issues."
The Pirate Party will take up one of Sweden's 18 seats in the 785-seat parliament. "We will use all of our strength to defend personal integrity and our civil rights," Engstrom claims.
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