
M goes to frontal attack on five fronts against ordinary people before the autumn elections. M wants to remove the last-ditch rule in LAS. This protects everyone, i.a. older people who cannot work as hard as the strongest young people but who may have more to offer in other ways. Removing the turn order rule would also affect the women and others who are subjected to sexual harassment. The more insecure the employment, the more difficult it is to claim whatever right applies.
M wants to abandon the Swedish model of the social partners setting wages and collective agreements. First employment for young people as well as new arrivals must have a statutory salary ceiling. What M does not realize is that if the low- and middle-income earners have good wages or compensation, they can consume so that there are profits for the companies and taxes for the public.
M wants, in addition to handling the situation with the Harbor Workers' Union in Gothenburg, also to reduce the possibility for the unions to sympathize with other unions.
M wants to re-introduce the automatic out-insurance after a certain time which the Alliance introduced in 2006-2014 and which S removed i.a. for cancer patients.
M wants to reintroduce the old rules on public procurement which did not allow consideration of whether bidders complied with collective agreements.
Certainly, academic degrees need to pay better, especially for women's academic careers, just as women's working careers need to pay better. But in a good society, all citizens have fairly similar conditions. When the working conditions of refugees in a Middle Eastern country worsened, it caused the native citizens to be out of a job instead.
We are getting more and stronger financial crises since the neoliberal era with worse conditions for ordinary people started around 1980 after inspiration from Thatcher and Reagan. After this time, consumption has been kept going by loan-based purchasing power replacing income-based purchasing power. When people cannot afford to pay back their increasingly large loans, the loan-driven social model falls like a house of cards.