Founded in 2012, the Pirate Party, a libertarian movement campaigning for more transparency in politics, Internet freedoms and copyright reform, garnered 43 per cent of voter support in a Gallup poll conducted Monday and Tuesday and published by daily Frettabladid and Channel 2 television.
In the weeks prior to the leak of the so-called Panama Papers on public figures' offshore financial dealings, the Pirate Party had been credited with between 25 and 35 per cent.
The centre-right Progressive Party of outgoing prime minister Sigmundur David Gunnlaugsson garnered just 7.9 per cent, behind the opposition Social Democrats' 10.2 percent.
"We owe a lot to our prime minister. This kind of scandal was unexpected," Pirate Party spokeswoman Sunna Arvarsdottir told AFP.
Gunnlaugsson announced yesterday that he was stepping down from his post, becoming the first major political casualty to emerge from the Panama Papers scandal.
The leftwing opposition has insisted on an early election, noting that the finance and interior ministers, both of the Independence Party, have also been named in the Panama Papers.
The documents revealed by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) showed that Gunnlaugsson and his wife owned an offshore company in the British Virgin Islands and had placed millions of dollars of her inheritance there.
Gunnlaugsson has said he regretted not having done so, but insisted he and his wife had followed Icelandic law and paid all their taxes in Iceland.
The ICIJ noted only that he had "violated Iceland's ethics rules.
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