Norway ruling Labour Party wins reelection while populists score gains
Labour Party secured 53 of 169 seats with 28% vote, while the far-right Progress Party doubled to 24%, becoming main opposition amid debates on taxes, oil, and military spending.
- Norway's ruling Labour Party retained its position as the largest party in the Storting, projected to secure 53 seats according to preliminary results from Monday's parliamentary election.
- The right-wing Progress Party made significant gains, rising to 48 seats, more than double its allocation from four years ago.
- Concerns over living costs and international conflicts influenced voter sentiment, with 59 percent believing another war in Europe is likely within the next decade, according to the Peace Research Institute Oslo.
51 Articles
51 Articles
In Norway, youth fuel rise of populist right
Read: 3 min Norway’s populist right, which saw a historic rise in the country’s general election, has managed to rally young men, who are drawn to its anti-tax, anti-elite, and anti-immigration message, largely through social media. While the country’s left-wing parties emerged victorious in Monday’s election, allowing Labour Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store to remain in power, the Progress Party achieved its best performance since its founding i…
Norway’s Youth Gravitates to the Right, Election Shows
Norway’s Progress Party achieved a historic result in Monday’s general election, becoming the country’s second-largest political force and, for the first time since its founding in 1973, the main opposition party. While Labour Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store secured another term in office after the left-wing bloc’s victory, the Progress Party won 23.9% of the vote, marking its best performance ever. Much of the party’s momentum came from younger…
Norway PM’s left bloc wins election, populists surge
Norway's left-wing bloc led by Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store won Monday's legislative elections, which also saw a record surge in support for the anti-immigration Progress Party. In power since 2021, Store is expected to continue to head a minority Labour government, backed up by the other four left-wing parties. The election campaign in the wealthy nation of 5.6 million people had centred largely on domestic issues but was also influenced by …
Prime Minister Støre celebrated a surprise success. Why Donald Trump indirectly helped him and why coalition negotiations in the oil-rich north are important for the whole of Europe.
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