*** Welcome to piglix ***

Confederation of Swedish Conservative and Liberal Students

Confederation of Swedish Conservative and Liberal Students
Fria moderata studentförbundet
Chairperson Hugo Selling
Founded 1942
International affiliation International Young Democrat Union (IYDU)
European affiliation European Democrat Students (EDS)
Nordic affiliation Nordic Conservative Student Union (NKSU)
Website
www.fmsf.se


The Confederation of Swedish Conservative and Liberal Students (Swedish: Fria moderata studentförbundet, FMSF, "Free Moderate Student League") is a Swedish student organisation. It considers itself to be non-partisan, but is politically close to the Moderate Party. The organisation is a founding member of the European Democrat Students.

The Confederation of Swedish Conservative and Liberal Students was formed in 1942 as the Conservative Student League of Sweden (Sveriges konservativa studentförbund) but changed its name in 1969, a couple of months before the Moderate Party adopted its current name.

The European Democrat Students arose from cooperation between the Conservative Student League of Sweden and the Association of Christian Democratic Students, that started when a delegation from Sweden attended the annual meeting of the Association of Christian Democratic Students in West Berlin in 1958.

The Confederation of Swedish Conservative and Liberal Students consists of several independent student clubs, found in many universities across Sweden. The biggest is the one at Lund University. Other clubs that exist throughout Sweden is for instance FMS Freja in Västerås and FMSF Uppsala. The Council of Chairmen (Ordföranderådet), consisting of the chairmen of each constituent club, is formally the board of the League. In practice most power is in the hand of the Presidium which is made up by the Chairman and four deputies.

The organisation takes great pride in its approach to politics. It claims that "the arguments are more important than the opinions" and "the debate is more important than the decisions". It takes more care in fostering open debate than taking policy decisions or writing manifestos.

The League has, however, been known for its fierce libertarianism. At its annual conference debate has through the years centred on things like legalisation of narcotics, free immigration and abolishing the ban on prostitution. It, in contrast to the Moderate Party, opposed Sweden's membership of the euro.


...
Wikipedia

...