– I’d love to see a Sweden where ideology and issues come together and set against each other, hard and passionately. But never in such a way as to nullify our common responsibility for the country.
Despite his introductory speech in which Stefan Löfven demand more ideology and more substantive issues in Swedish politics, was the Prime Minister’s Christmas speech thin on politics, and he devoted most of the speech to what he calls “the Swedish Promise,” a concepts that emerged soon after the autumn elections.
– The Swedish promise means that we help each other with three things in particular, the only thing is knowledge, the second is security, and the third is gender equality.
Earlier today criticized the former finance minister Anders Borg Stephen Löfvens government for failing to come up with enough concrete proposals relating to the Alliance in order to avoid an additional choice.
– The natural had been that he had sat down, worked through their manifesto and made proposals to the alliance parties to a negotiation and one of those proposals would have had to build on that backed off from higher ungsomsarbetsgivaravgifter and earned income tax credits.
But after century dismissed Stefan Löfven criticism that it would not be appropriate for the Social Democrats to accept the Alliance’s policies.
– I note that the Minister Anders Borg in the election campaign was one of those that was clear ‘no’, but This was put to the election alliance. Anders Borg was one of those post-election snuck out the back door when it started blowing a bit so I’m not too impressed and they suggest it is that we should accept the alliance politics and it does not impress me, that I can say.
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