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The crown pandemic meant that he was allowed to stay longer than he originally planned, but Jonas Sjöstedt will soon be leaving as party leader of the Left Party. His latest battle is labor law, where he wants Stefan Löfven (S) to withdraw the latest investigation. Otherwise, you threaten to mistrust the Prime Minister.
It was also what came to dominate the last duel of Sjöstedt and Annie Lööf when they faced each other at Kulturhuset in Stockholm.
– We believe that the current job market is unfair. It is unfair to all loyal servants who have not had the right to skill development. It’s unfair to those outside. There are people with a long medical history who never get that job. It is the young people who are knocking on the door, said Annie Lööf.
– Time to give flexibility for small businesses, to reduce risk and completion costs.
Jonas Sjöstedt replied:
– It is quite cheap and easy to fire people in Sweden compared to other countries in Europe. For small businesses, there is something called a trial job, I recommend it.
– There is nothing modern about people becoming lawless and having safe and quiet workplaces. This is going backwards, not forwards.
It was under Jonas Sjöstedts Last debate in the Riksdag as Annie Lööf as present invited the V-leader to a final duel. The leaders had previously toured Sweden and debated in front of plenary sessions. The rules of the game have been very clear: let others talk to the point and not personal attacks.
So it was in this duel. The conversation began with an explanation from the two leaders as to why it has been a successful recipe.
– There are clear political contradictions, at the same time that honor and glory must not be taken from each other. This conversation has been important to me and that you can meet people in it, said Jonas Sjöstedt.
– There will be very dynamic discussions when Jonas and I meet. Both in taking turns, but in colliding with each other with a twinkle in their eyes. I think it has been appreciated by everyone who has listened to us over the years, replied Annie Lööf.
Read more:
Full house when political opponents are allowed to get to the point
Ewa Stenberg: Voters want a debate without a twisted tone