Iceland's left-wing government won this weekend's snap general election as voters punished the conservatives they blame for the country's economic meltdown seven months ago.
The conservative Independence Party, in power for 18 years until it resigned in January amid massive protests over the financial crisis that brought Iceland to the brink of bankruptcy, posted its worst-ever election score.
"We lost this time but we will win again later," party leader Bjarni Benediktsson said, conceding defeat having garnered just 23.7 percent of votes, far below the conservatives' previous all-time low of 27 percent in 1987.
Prime Minister Johanna Sigurdardottir of the pro-EU Social Democratic Party campaigned heavily on leading Iceland into the European Union and will now have to try to reach an agreement with its eurosceptic coalition partner, the Left Green Movement.
The Social Democrats won 29.8 percent of votes and the Left Greens 21.7 percent, final results showed Sunday, giving the coalition an absolute majority of 51.5 percent, a first for a left-wing government.
"Our time has come," Sigurdardottir, a 66-year-old openly gay feminist, told cheering supporters.
The Independence Party was in power in the early 1990s when the financial markets were deregulated, and has been held accountable for the current crisis which has seen thousands of people lose their jobs and their savings.
It was the first government in the world to fall in the wake of the global financial crisis that erupted last year.
Benediktsson said he got the voters' message.
"It has been clear that we have lost trust and we are just beginning to gain that back," he said.
Iceland was one of the most prosperous countries in the world until late last year, when the global financial crisis led to the collapse of its oversized financial sector and had a devastating impact.
The state had to take control of the country's three major banks in October, as the local currency, the Icelandic krona, lost 44 percent of its value.
Unemployment, which was virtually non-existent before the crisis, is expected to hit 10 percent by the end of this year as the economy shrinks by 10 percent, and inflation is currently hovering around 15 percent.
The country received a 2.1-billion-dollar 1.58-billion-euro bailout from the International Monetary Fund in November, and some early signs of a recovery have been observed.
Sigurdardottir is a fierce advocate of joining the European Union quickly and adopting the euro, arguing that doing so would shelter the Nordic island nation of 320,000 people from global turbulence.
"If we apply immediately for EU membership we will be able to adopt the euro within four years," she said Saturday, adding that Iceland "already meets 70 to 75 percent of EU criteria."
After the election results came in, she said: "This is a clear message that people want us to start thinking about the EU."
Voter participation was believed to be high, with the daily Morgunbladid reporting turnout of 85.1 percent, compared with 83.6 percent in 2007.
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