– I think it is difficult to call it a proposal when the Liberal Party does not come up with any funding itself.
– I remember that the Liberal Party’s former finance minister Claus Hjort had a sign standing on his drill that said: “Where should the money come from?”. And the same can probably be said to the Liberal Party here, Christian Rabjerg Madsen.
According to the rapporteur, the Liberal Party and the Social Democrats are already negotiating how to get more hands on the labor market.
– If they come with a financing, then we have to discuss it. We are currently negotiating with the Liberal Party on how we can get more people into the working community.
– And there we listen to the proposals that come, but this is a very expensive proposal, so before we can have a real discussion, at least some funding is needed, he says.
Christian Rabjerg Madsen is skeptical about possible funding.
– After I heard Ellemann this week from the Folketing’s rostrum say that their tax stop does not cost anything, I am somewhat skeptical of funding proposals from the Liberal Party, he says.
Jakob Ellemann-Jensen also attacked the Social Democrats for “unification” and the lack of free choice in Elderly Care.
But Christian Rabjerg Madsen does not understand that at all.
– I have a bit of a hard time seeing how the Liberal Party’s proposal differs from what it is today, so it sounds a bit to me like old wine in new bottles.
– I have really found it difficult to see what the new is. Therefore, I also think that the Liberal Party should have spent more time coming up with ideas for how we actually raise elderly care, he says.