“…However, by emphasizing the structural factors in their countries of origin -'they came to Sweden due to the social vulnerability, discrimination, and lack of work, education, and housing that they suffer from in their home countries' -the responsibility of Sweden, as an EU member, to address the issue is deflected, thus playing down the need for local actions to alleviate the situation. The fact that these statements originate from politicians who previously opposed the ban on begging indicates that Swedish society has become increasingly conservative regarding immigration and social matters (Jylhä et al 2019;Zelano 2019;Hellström 2021). These politicians, representing a spectrum of affiliations from left to right, position themselves as experts on the subject, collectively adopting a critical stance toward begging and portraying it as an ineffective and detrimental social practice, as evidenced by their linguistic choices: '[begging] is not the solution to poverty' , 'is neither a way out of poverty nor exclusion,, and 'does not create good societies' .…”