It was in connection with the so-called Tidö agreement being presented on October 14 that it was discovered that the government and the Sweden Democrats want to initiate a special project to strengthen the competitiveness of Sweden's top leagues in football and ice hockey.

Whether this means that a review of the so-called 51 percent rule, which regulates that 51 percent of Swedish sports associations must be owned by the members to prevent private investors from being able to take control of the clubs, should be initiated is currently unclear.

Several polled politicians have claimed that it is not relevant to review the issue at the same time as the Liberals' party leader Johan Pehrson opened for it.

- I have spoken to several clubs who think that you should be able to have several companies on the stock exchange, quite simply.

I'm willing to look at it.

But it is also about other measures.

The interest in Allsvenskan being bought up by foreign states is a limited interest for me, Pehrson told Expressen on Thursday.

A statement that is not at all well received by the Swedish Sports Confederation's chairman Björn Eriksson.

In a debate article that was presented on altinget.se on Friday, Pehrson's statement is seen.

"One of the cornerstones of Swedish sports and which is emphasized in the sports policy that the Riksdag has supported in unison in numerous investigations is that the sports movement is an independent movement that is based on a democratic structure from the individual member, via associations and specialist sports federations to the National Sports Confederation.

It is precisely the members who decide in a popular movement.

Therefore, the statements that have appeared recently, that the government could change the sports movement's statutes regarding the so-called 51 percent rule, indicate a certain ignorance that leads thoughts to authoritarian leadership," writes Eriksson and continues to seriously put his foot down:

"Initiatives that do not respect the independence of the sports movement are avoided.

It is a matter that does not concern the government".