The Government's new Minister of Civil Affairs, Lena Micko , needs to pay particular attention to the new demonstrations for the school, which will be held today and tomorrow around the country.

She already knows that more and more municipalities are making cuts.

The assignment is clear: Now she has to bring more money to the school.

The country's municipalities and school principals disarm the school . Of course, the country's teachers feel the effects of the cuts and protests continue. Like the wrists that grow.

In August and September this year, a questionnaire survey was conducted among the Teachers' Association of Local Authorities, which the magazine Skolvärlden tells about.

When asked about the representatives, the compulsory school in the municipality in which they operate is able to live up to the requirements of the school act, 74 percent answered no. On the question of the municipality this year implementing savings or cuts in primary school, almost 8 out of 10 answered yes.

Right now, budget work is in progress for many municipalities next year.

This weekend School marches and other marches around the country are being organized and protests are ready to be carried out from Piteå to Trelleborg.

It is teachers, parents, principals and other professional groups in the school that have joined forces and formed protest groups against the municipal cuts.

They see that the cuts mean that they do not get the resources needed to give the students the education they are entitled to.

The grassroots actions against the savings have the wholehearted support of the Teachers' Federation. As union representatives we fight every day for school savings.

It is good that more people say away.

Our new Minister of Civil Affairs, Lena Micko, must listen to the teachers who conduct the demonstrations. She is now responsible for the government of the municipalities.

She must understand that it is enough now that it must be invested in school. This is where we create the future and ensure that the country can move forward. The school is also a prerequisite for democracy, while enabling social mobility, innovation and strengthened competitiveness.

When Lena Micko was a representative of SKL, Sweden's Municipalities and the County Council, she explained that the state has a responsibility to provide the municipalities with the conditions needed to fulfill their commitments.

Now she must also get the entire government and especially Finance Minister Magdalena Andersson to realize it and match requirements with resources.

Lena Micko must not be transformed into the Minister of Local Government for whom she has already been called.

Instead, it is important to take the municipalities out of the crisis and a good start is if she lifts the financial responsibility for the school from the municipal politicians and puts back where this responsibility legally belongs - at the national level.

The country's school politicians at both the municipal level and in the Riksdag and the government must listen to the teachers.

It is enough now, it must not continue like this.