Wednesday, September 17, 2014

C does not want to break the budget – Swedish Dagbladet

C does not want to break the budget – Swedish Dagbladet

– We have defended the budget integrity at all times. That we will do now, says Ådahl newspaper.

To trap proposal from a joint budget of S and MP requires the four bourgeois parties to agree. Today hits the Speaker of Parliament Per Westerberg all parliamentary parties to ask how they position themselves in both government as budget issue.

At a press conference yesterday, he said that it will be much harder to get a new government that can get through its budget in the fall than to get a capable prime minister vote. He said that he will try to get straight answers from the parties.

– I’ll try to probe as far as possible, said Westerberg.

This spring, lifted the red-green parties, and was supported of SD out proposals for further reductions in income from the Alliance’s budget. The Alliance has previously said that it will add a competing budget motion, which could be voted through by a majority in parliament on SD supports it. Regarding this will not Ådahl with some new news.

Sweden has a complicated cabinet and budget process ahead. S + MP who is now trying to get the support of the FP and C to their government have fewer seats in parliament than the four Alliance parties together, which has 142 seats. S + MP and the Alliance comes as it looks now, to submit a respective autumn budget.

After Stefan Löfven on Monday rejected the Left in favor of trying to attract FP and C to the collaboration is the red-green in even weaker minority than what it looked like on election night, as the V-leader Jonas Sjöstedt now has said that V should go in opposition to S + MP.

What budget supports SD, or the Red-Green Alliance, also risk being unclear until the vote in parliament because neither side has said it is willing to negotiate with SD.

According to a survey, which Ipsos conducted on behalf of the Daily News, is 19 per cent of Liberal Party voters for partisan government led by the Social Democrats. Only five percent of voters are for Moderates, and among the Centre Party voters, the figure is eight percent.

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