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Swiss government slams 10 million population cap plan as threat to economy

By Thomson Reuters Mar 16, 2026 | 6:07 AM

ZURICH, March 16 (Reuters) – The Swiss government on Monday pressed the electorate to reject an initiative aimed at restricting the population to 10 ​million, which it argues will jeopardise cooperation with ‌the European Union and damage the economy.

The initiative, supported by the right-wing Swiss People’s Party, or SVP, faces a referendum on June 14 at a time when Switzerland is moving ‌to ​deepen relations with the EU ⁠in order to safeguard ⁠market access to its main trade partner.

Under the plan, the permanent resident population must not exceed 10 million before 2050, and Switzerland should abandon its ​freedom of movement agreement with the EU.

Its proponents say immigration to Switzerland is too high, causing housing ⁠shortages, excessive rents and putting ⁠undue pressure on public infrastructure.

The SVP, ​Switzerland’s biggest party, opposes closer integration with the EU, seeing ​it as a threat to Swiss sovereignty and ‌saddling the country with excess regulation.

The population is now over 9 million, and the governing Federal Council said the initiative threatens prosperity, internal security and Switzerland’s ⁠humanitarian traditions.

As of 2024, foreign nationals made up more than 27% of the Swiss population, according to official data.

Justice ⁠Minister Beat Jans ‌spoke out against the initiative on ⁠Monday with representatives of cantonal governments, trade ​unions ‌and employers who said the measure ​would undermine ⁠the job market, and with it, companies.

It would also hamper cooperation on security and immigration with other European countries, the government said.

“In uncertain times, this initiative thus creates additional uncertainty,” it said.

(Reporting by Dave Graham, editing ​by Thomas Seythal)