In a significant development within the landscape of Swedish labor relations and digital communication strategies, Marie Nilsson, the chair of Sweden’s influential IF Metall union, has publicly announced her departure from the social media platform X (formerly known as Twitter). Nilsson is urging the union's followers and the broader public to migrate to Meta’s Threads instead. This move comes against the backdrop of a contentious and protracted dispute between IF Metall and Tesla Sweden, a conflict that has now spanned over two years and drawn global attention to the clash between Silicon Valley corporate practices and the Nordic labor model.
While the union leadership has clarified that the decision to leave X is not formally a direct tactic of the labor strike, the implications of the move are deeply intertwined with the figure of Elon Musk, who owns both the electric vehicle giant and the social media platform. The departure signals a growing dissatisfaction among civil society organizations with the changing environment on X, as well as a pragmatic shift in how labor unions aim to maintain visibility in an increasingly fragmented digital world.
The Decision to Exit X
Marie Nilsson’s exit from X marks a symbolic turning point for IF Metall’s digital strategy. For years, Twitter (now X) served as a primary hub for journalists, politicians, and opinion leaders in Sweden, making it an essential tool for public discourse and advocacy. However, in comments provided to Dagens Arbete (DA), Nilsson articulated that the utility of the platform has diminished significantly.
Nilsson emphasized that while the exit is not officially tied to the specific negotiations or lack thereof with Tesla Sweden, the transformation of the platform under Musk’s ownership played a decisive role. She noted that the union had remained on the platform for as long as it did primarily because of its density of media professionals.
“We have stayed because many journalists pick up news there. But as more and more people have left X, we have felt that the standard has now been reached on that platform,” Nilsson stated.
This statement reflects a broader sentiment shared by many institutions that have seen the degradation of discourse and the exodus of key users from X. For a union engaged in a high-profile conflict, the ability to control the narrative and reach stakeholders is paramount. If the journalists and policymakers are no longer engaging on the platform, or if the environment has become too toxic or chaotic to foster productive dialogue, the strategic value of maintaining a presence there evaporates.
The Musk Factor and Indirect Links
The relationship between IF Metall’s departure from X and its conflict with Tesla is complex. Jesper Pettersson, the press officer at IF Metall, provided crucial context regarding this dynamic. He highlighted that while the decision to leave isn't a formal boycott action against Tesla, it is impossible to ignore the connection between the two entities due to their shared ownership by Elon Musk.
Pettersson explained that the union’s exit is “only indirectly linked” to Tesla Sweden. However, he elaborated on the nature of this indirect link, pointing to the evidence that Musk’s ownership has fundamentally altered the nature of the social media site.
“Indirectly it does, since there is a lot of evidence that his ownership has caused the change in the platform to be so significant,” Pettersson noted.
This commentary underscores the unique challenge facing organizations that find themselves at odds with Elon Musk’s business interests. Unlike traditional corporate disputes where the battlefield is limited to the workplace or the negotiation table, conflicts involving Musk-owned companies often bleed into the digital square. For IF Metall, utilizing a communication platform owned by the very individual resisting their calls for a collective bargaining agreement presents a paradox. While they aimed to use the platform to reach opinion leaders, the degradation of that platform—attributed to Musk’s management style—has rendered it less effective.
Diminishing Returns on Digital Engagement
Beyond the symbolic friction of using a Musk-owned platform, IF Metall’s leadership pointed to cold, hard metrics as a driving force behind the decision. The union assessed the demographic reality of X’s current user base and found it lacking in relevance to their core mission.
Pettersson candidly discussed the trade-off the union had been making. For a long time, the presence of the "chattering class"—journalists and politicians—was enough to justify the resources required to maintain an active profile on X. However, as the platform has evolved, the disconnect between the platform's user base and the union's actual membership has widened.
“We have nevertheless assessed that the platform had value for reaching journalists, politicians and other opinion leaders. But it is a microscopic proportion of the public and our members who are there, and now that value has decreased,” Pettersson added.
The description of the user base as a “microscopic proportion of the public and our members” highlights a critical realization for modern labor movements. While Twitter/X has historically been a powerful megaphone for shaping media narratives, it is not necessarily where the working class or the general public resides digitally. By clinging to a platform that is losing its elite users while simultaneously failing to reach the rank-and-file membership, the union risks shouting into a void.
The Shift to Threads: An Experimental Alternative
In response to the declining value of X, IF Metall has begun pivoting its digital resources toward Threads, the text-based conversation app developed by Meta (the parent company of Facebook and Instagram). The union has characterized this move as experimental, indicating a cautious approach to building a new digital home.
The transition to Threads is not merely a swap of apps; it represents a testing ground for future outreach. The union is currently in a phase of evaluation, monitoring how effective Threads will be in regaining the visibility and engagement that was lost on X. This "experimental" label suggests that the digital landscape for advocacy groups is currently in flux, with no single platform offering the dominance that Twitter once held.
By urging audiences to follow them on Threads, IF Metall is attempting to bring their community with them. However, this migration brings its own set of ideological complications, which the union leadership has addressed with notable transparency.
The Irony of the "Swedish Model" and Big Tech
Perhaps the most striking aspect of IF Metall’s explanation for the switch is the acknowledgement of the irony involved. In leaving a platform owned by a tech mogul who resists the Swedish collective bargaining model, the union is moving to a platform owned by Meta—another American tech giant that does not operate under Sweden’s collective bargaining model.
Jesper Pettersson addressed this contradiction head-on, offering a pragmatic view of the digital ecosystem. He acknowledged that Meta, like Tesla, is not a participant in the traditional Swedish labor structure. However, the necessity of digital visibility forces the union to make difficult choices.
“In a perfect world, all large international companies would be supporters of the Swedish model when they come here. But unfortunately, the reality is not like that,” Pettersson said.
This quote encapsulates the broader struggle between the "Swedish Model"—which relies on mutual respect and signed agreements between employers and unions—and the expansionist strategies of global tech corporations. The union finds itself in a position where adhering strictly to ideological purity regarding platform ownership would result in digital silence.
Visibility vs. Ideology: Playing by the Rules of the Game
The rationale provided by Pettersson for choosing Threads despite Meta’s labor stance serves as a fascinating case study in modern pragmatism. The union has determined that the cost of invisibility is higher than the cost of utilizing a platform owned by a non-union-aligned corporation.
“If we are to be visible at all in this social media world, we have to play by the rules of the game. The alternative would be to become completely invisible, and that would not benefit our members,” he explained.
“Playing by the rules of the game” implies an acceptance of the current reality: social media infrastructure is almost exclusively owned by large, multinational corporations that may not align with socialist or labor-focused values. For IF Metall, the priority remains the ability to advocate for their members effectively. If the audience is on Threads, or if Threads offers a more stable environment for discourse than X, the union must be there, regardless of Meta’s corporate policies.
This pragmatic stance highlights the difficult position of modern labor movements. To fight for workers' rights in the physical world (such as the mechanics at Tesla service centers), they must utilize the digital tools provided by the very sector they are often at odds with. The fear of becoming "completely invisible" drives the strategy, overriding the preference for a "perfect world" where all platforms align with the Swedish model.
Contextualizing the Dispute with Tesla
To fully understand the weight of Marie Nilsson’s departure from X, one must look at the ongoing conflict that colors every interaction between IF Metall and Elon Musk’s companies. For over two years, Tesla Sweden and IF Metall have been locked in a bitter dispute centered on Tesla’s refusal to sign a collective bargaining agreement.
In Sweden, collective bargaining agreements are the bedrock of the labor market. They set the standards for wages, benefits, and working conditions, negating the need for state-enforced minimum wage laws. Tesla’s refusal to sign such an agreement is viewed by the union not just as a dispute over specific terms, but as a challenge to the Swedish labor model itself.
The conflict has led to strikes and sympathy actions across various sectors in Sweden, with dockworkers, electricians, and postal workers engaging in blockades to support IF Metall’s cause. Amidst this high-stakes battle, the communication channels used by the union are of critical importance. The decision to leave X removes the union from a platform where Musk has direct control and influence, potentially shielding their messaging from algorithmic shifts or policy changes that could disadvantage them.
The Future of Union Communications
IF Metall’s move to Threads may signal a broader trend among advocacy groups and unions. As X continues to undergo changes that alienate certain user demographics, organizations are forced to diversify their social media portfolios. The reliance on a single "town square" is ending, replaced by a fragmented landscape where different audiences reside on different apps.
For IF Metall, the success of this "experiment" on Threads will likely depend on whether the journalists and opinion leaders they prize so highly also make the switch. If Threads can replicate the media density that Twitter once had, it may become the new standard for labor advocacy in Sweden.
In the meantime, the dispute with Tesla continues unabated. By leaving X, Marie Nilsson and IF Metall have drawn a clear line in the digital sand. They are refusing to contribute content to a platform they feel has degraded, and they are refusing to rely on a tool owned by their adversary, even if the alternative requires a compromise of its own. As the union settles into its new digital home, the eyes of the Swedish public—and the global labor movement—will be watching to see if this shift in strategy aids them in their ultimate goal: securing a collective agreement for Tesla workers.