- We four parties in the January agreement have all said that we can discuss the schedule and the LOV, Stefan Löfven tells SVT.

The government parties, C and L, have now begun discussions on how to fulfill the requirements for the opposition's distrust threat to Labor Minister Eva Nordmark (S) to be withdrawn.

The reform of the Employment Service is a point of the four parties' so-called January agreements.

It is the Left Party that has taken the initiative in the distrust, but the Moderates, the Christian Democrats and the Swedish Democrats have said that they will join if there is a vote.

Wide agreement

The Prime Minister would like to avoid this and believes that there are openings for a broad agreement, with M and KD.

- The center has now said that they are ready to discuss the law on freedom of choice (LOV) and how it should be implemented in the Employment Service, where we have two open points, Löfven tells TT and also refers to the question of the timetable for the turnaround.

These are primarily two points that M and KD have missed.

- The Center Party thinks that the Employment Service needs to be fundamentally redone, to better support the unemployed and so that more companies can find the right skills. It is very positive that there seems to be broad support for this in Parliament. 6 out of 8 parties want the reform to end, says Anders W Jonsson, temporary party leader for the Center Party to SVT.

- The Moderates and the Christian Democrats have expressed two concrete views on how they think the reform should be implemented. We are prepared to discuss these points with them. We therefore want the government to initiate discussions with M and KD. However, negotiating with the Left Party is out of the question, he continues.

Two requirements

The Left Party announced on Thursday that it intends to proceed with its mistrust of Nordmark. M and KD support it but give the government a deadline for Tuesday, December 10.

Unlike V's five requirements, M and KD placed two. These are the two requirements that the discussions now revolve around, on the timetable and the law on freedom of choice.

The Moderate Leader Ulf Kristersson makes it clear that the Moderates do not negotiate or intend to negotiate with the government, C and L. They simply have to come up with something on their own that M, KD and V can accept.

"... the common position presented by M, Kd and V yesterday is not a negotiating bid for the government," he writes on Facebook.

If M's and KD's two requirements are met, there will be no vote.