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Norway's extreme right Progress Party wracked by internal
feuding
By Steve James
19 December 2000
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In a venomous and highly public dispute, Norway's extreme right
wing Progress Party (PP) has expelled 16 of its leading members
from the Oslo area. Those kicked out are supporters of the party's
national chairman and Storting (parliament) deputy Dag
Danielsen. The expulsions represent an escalation of disputes
that have festered for several years and revolve around the extent
to which PP leader Carl I. Hagen is able to dictate policy.
Like right wing formations across Europe, the Progress Party
has sought to gain from a widespread alienation from official
politics, and Norway's Labour Party in particular. It has done
this by presenting viciously racist and anti-working class policies
dressed up in populist rhetoric. Since its foundation in the 1970s,
the PP has advanced anti-immigrant measures, scapegoating them
for Norway's social problems; it also proposes drastic tax and
welfare cuts. The entire spectrum of Norwegian politics has subsequently
embraced the PP's anti-immigrant agenda, while professing to oppose
the party itself. As a consequence, Norway's immigration policy
ranks among the tightest in Europe.
From a low in 1994when its opinion poll rating went down
to 3.5 percentthe Progress Party has recovered to the point
where it superseded Labour as Norway's largest party in September,
a position Labour had held since 1927. Although the PP has subsequently
lost its leading position, the party, which receives millions
of kroner in state funding, presently has 25 Storting seats
and could be in a position to form or join a coalition government
after next year's general elections.
Concerned that an outpouring of racist propaganda from his
long-time party colleagues would disrupt relations with other
parties and provoke broader political opposition, Hagen has insisted
that he alone can comment on the party's immigration policy. The
party leadership has also moved against longstanding members viewed
as an obstacle to coalition negotiations.
Last December Hagen was made aware of plans by Danielsen to
remove him and 20 of his supporters from leading positions. In
response, Hagen sought to manoeuvre his own people ahead of Danielsen's
supporters in the lists for prospective Storting candidates.
In July, Hagen publicly declared that the party "needed
a bit of tidying up." Two notoriously racist deputies, Vidar
Kleppe and Øystein Hedstrøm, responded by holding
a closed meeting of their immediate collaborators. Kleppe and
Hedstrøm, among others, had previously attended meetings
of the Norwegian Associationostensibly a "think tank"
which came out of the Popular Movement Against Immigration, which
collapsed after one of its founder members was convicted of planning
to bomb a refugee centre.
This autumn, Hagen launched unprecedented efforts to expel
his opponents in advance of an Oslo branch extraordinary meeting.
Alleging "disloyalty", Hagen described Danielsen as
a "cancerous tumour". The 16 were expelled for up to
30 months and Hagen supporter Arve Lønnum was imposed as
party leader in Oslo in place of Danielsen. Hagen is reported
to be preparing further moves against Kleppe and Hedstrøm.
In response, Danielsen, his brother Per, a lawyer, and eight
other banned officials launched an unprecedented and unsuccessful
court case in the Oslo Court claiming that Hagen was "doing
away with democracy in the Progress Party". Hagen claims
to have received death threats saying, "we have hit men that
can easily take you out today", calling on him to cease the
expulsion campaign.
It is indicative of the extent to which the PP has been accepted
as part of the political establishment that the Norwegian press
has weighed in to defend the rights of those expelled.
Dagsavisen opined in its November 27 edition, "Fortunately,
it is rare for people to be thrown out of a party simply because
the chairman does not like them. The process Mr Hagen has initiated
against the leadership and other elected officers of the Oslo
branch, the Progress Party's largest and traditionally most important
county organisation, is cruel to those concerned, deeply undemocratic
and, as a matter of principle, damaging to the entire party system
and our parliamentary democracy."
Next day Dagens Næringsliv criticised the move
for having alienated potential coalition partners, the Christian
Democrats: "The trouble is that Mr Hagen must have the support
of the Christian Democrats if he is to get into office. And the
Christian Democrats are not particularly impressed by the current
purge. So Mr Hagen risks losing both the chance of a major success
in next autumn's general election and important alliance partners
afterwards."
On December 4, Aftenposten stated that the events showed,
"one of the country's largest parties has an organisational
culture that is undemocratic, unworthy and therefore totally unacceptable
in an enlightened democracy." However, it added, "We
are, after all, dealing with a populist party, not a racist one.
In-fighting of the kind we have seen in the Progress Party, with
its strange and nebulous mixture of political, organisational
and personal conflicts, is most often found in populist parties."
Behind the media's supposed concern with PP inner-party democracy,
and the fine distinction drawn between racism and populism, is
a fear that the party will discredit itself at a time when it
is being considered for government office by sections of the Norwegian
bourgeoisie. With Labour slumping in the polls, the PP will figure
prominently in talks for a future right wing coalition constructed
with the intention of speeding up privatisation and the destruction
of social welfare. A too searching examination of the Progress
Party's viciously racist underbelly, as it is presently being
exposed in the ongoing factional warfare, would undermine the
possibility of it playing such a political role.
See Also:
Rightwing violence in Sweden
[29 November 2000]
Scandinavia
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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