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Poll shows Swiss evenly split on proposal to cap population at 10 million

Poll shows Swiss evenly split on proposal to cap population at 10 million

ReutersFri, May 8, 2026 at 6:09 AM UTC

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A Swiss flag and a mouette boat, as seen from the Mont Blanc bridge, in Geneva, Switzerland, March 18, 2026. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse

ZURICH, May 8 (Reuters) - Swiss voters are evenly split on whether to back a referendum proposal to restrict Switzerland's population to ‌10 million, an opinion poll showed on Friday.

The Swiss government is ‌opposed to the initiative championed by the right-wing Swiss People's Party (SVP) that goes to a ​vote on June 14, saying it will damage cooperation with the European Union, its key trade partner, and hurt the economy.

The proposal stipulates the permanent resident population must not exceed 10 million before 2050, and that Switzerland should end ‌its freedom of movement accord ⁠with the EU.

The new survey by polling firm GfS Bern for public broadcaster SRG conducted from April 20 to ⁠May 3, showed 47% of 19,728 respondents in favour of the proposal and 47% against.

The rest expressed no opinion. The poll had a margin of error ​of plus ​or minus 2.8 percentage points.

A survey ​published by another polling institute ‌in late April showed a slight majority in favour of the initiative.

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Concern about rapid population growth and pressure on public infrastructure has fed support for the proposal, although business groups warn it will jeopardise prosperity.

Switzerland's population recently breached the 9 million mark, and official data show foreign nationals accounted for ‌more than 27% of the total by ​2024.

The SVP, Switzerland's biggest party, opposes closer integration ​with the EU, depicting it ​as a threat to Swiss sovereignty and a source ‌of excess regulation.

Swiss lawmakers are debating ​a Swiss-EU deal struck ​in late 2024 that would deepen joint economic integration.

The government wants Switzerland to consolidate ties with the EU to help protect the ​economy amid uncertainty fuelled ‌in part by the trade policies of President Donald Trump's administration. ​In 2025, Washington hit Switzerland with the highest tariffs in Europe.

(Writing ​by Dave GrahamEditing by Tomasz Janowski)

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Source: “AOL Money”

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