Switzerland has delivered a resounding blow to the rising tide of populism. In a national referendum yesterday, voters decisively rejected a proposal to cap the country's population at 10 million, a measure championed by the right-wing Swiss People's Party (SVP). The result is being hailed as a victory for liberal European values, but the battle is far from over.
The proposal, known as the 'stop overpopulation' initiative, would have forced the government to impose strict immigration controls if the population ever reached 10 million. Currently standing at 8.6 million, the country's population is projected to hit that threshold within a decade. The SVP argued that unchecked immigration threatens national identity and strains resources like housing and healthcare. But opponents, including the federal government, countered that the cap would violate international treaties and damage the economy.
Exit polls show that 61% of Swiss voters opposed the measure, a margin that surprised even the most optimistic of its detractors. 'This is a clear signal that the Swiss people value openness and cooperation over fear and isolation,' said Federal Councillor Viola Amherd. The SVP, however, framed the result differently, accusing opponents of spreading 'scare tactics' and vowing to continue the fight.
The vote has implications far beyond Switzerland's borders. Across Europe, populist parties are using immigration as a wedge issue, tapping into anxieties over cultural change and economic pressure. Switzerland's rejection of the cap stands in stark contrast to recent developments in countries like Hungary, where Viktor Orbán's government has erected fences and passed draconian anti-immigration laws. It also offers a counter-narrative to Brexit, where fears of uncontrolled borders fuelled the Leave campaign.
But let's not get carried away. This is not a wholesale endorsement of open borders. Switzerland already has one of the strictest immigration systems in Europe. The country operates a quota system for non-EU nationals and has seen its net migration rate decline in recent years. The referendum was less a choice between open and closed doors, and more a rejection of a blunt instrument that would have tied the government's hands.
What the result reveals, however, is a deep-seated unease among the Swiss electorate. The SVP has not been vanquished. It remains the largest party in the federal parliament, and its rhetoric continues to resonate with voters who feel left behind by globalisation. The suburbs and rural areas voted overwhelmingly in favour of the cap. The urban centres, particularly Zurich and Geneva, opposed it. The divide is not just political, it is geographic and cultural.
For the European Union, which has watched the Swiss experiment with a mixture of frustration and envy, the result is a welcome reprieve. Switzerland is not a member of the bloc, but it has signed agreements that guarantee free movement of people. A cap would have jeopardised those agreements and set a dangerous precedent. As Brussels struggles to maintain cohesion in the face of nationalist challenges, a liberal victory in Switzerland provides a rare piece of good news.
But here is the uncomfortable truth: the underlying problems remain. Housing is becoming unaffordable in cities. Public services are feeling the strain. The benefits of immigration are not evenly distributed. Those who gained most from globalisation, the educated and the mobile, voted to keep the doors open. Those who feel they have lost out, the lower-skilled and the rural, voted to slam them shut. That tension will not disappear overnight.
The SVP has already indicated that it will return with new initiatives. Expect them to focus on specific issues like asylum or welfare reform, rather than broad population caps. For now, though, Switzerland has shown that liberal values can still win. But the margin of victory is not so comfortable that anyone can afford to be complacent.
This is not the end of the story. It is just the end of the first chapter.









