MADRID (Reuters) - Spain's opposition Socialists, needing to attract centrist voters to realise their hopes of ousting the ruling party in next month's election, are proposing labour reforms which aim to be kinder to workers while reassuring the business community.
In doing so, they are will be navigating a tricky course, a fact that Jordi Sevilla, the Socialists' party's chief economic advisor and a potential economy minister, acknowledges.
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