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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
New Norwegian government relies on far right Progress Party
By Steve James
30 October 2001
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On October 16, Progress Party leader Carl I. Hagen announced
on Norwegian television that he would support a Christian Democrat,
Conservative and Liberal coalition government led by former Prime
minister Kjell Bondevik. Hagens announcement was preceded
by a phone call to the sitting Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg,
triggering his resignation.
The Norwegian far-right, although not formally in government,
is far closer to the seat of power than at any point since the
collapse of the fascist government of Vidkun Quislings Nasjonal
Samling (National Unity) in 1945, a regime installed and maintained
by the armies of Adolf Hitler.
The Progress Party has emerged as a power broker during a month
of horse-trading after the September 10 Norwegian general election,
which saw the ruling Norwegian Labour Partys share of the
vote collapse to 24 percent. This result gave Labour just 43 seats,
representing its lowest figure since 1927. In an election that
showed a sharp political polarisation, the principal beneficiary
of Labours decline was not the Progress Party. On the right,
the Conservative Party won 38 seats, up 15, while the Socialist
Left won 23 seats, an increase of 14. The Progress Party gained
just 26 seats, up one. The Christian Democrats held 22 seats,
down 3, while former coalition partners, the Centre Party took
10 seats, down one.
The Progress Party did little more than maintain their position.
Prior to the election, the party was torn apart by a series of
sex scandals, rape allegations and internal feuds, which set Hagen
and his supporters against the partys most overtly fascistic
elements and ended with the latters expulsion. The party
is virtually a one-man band, with Hagen enjoying dictatorial powers
over a membership that appears to consist largely of petty local
operators and chisellers. During coalition negotiations, for example,
Progress deputy Jan Simenson was exposed as pulling local strings
to gain a restaurateur friend a liquor licence. Yet, despite the
disarray, the recent exposure of the partys vile internal
relations, and the dubious characters who constitute its active
membership, Progress has found itself in a position where it can
dictate terms to the new coalition.
This is not due to any internal strength of the far right itself,
but is largely a result of the rapid adoption by all the traditional
parties, including Labour, of the Progress Partys anti-welfare,
anti-immigrant agenda. Progress has carved a position for itself
by openly advocating reactionary views considered outside mainstream
politics. But Hagens role in the new government signifies
that what was once considered beyond the pale is now acceptable
to the Norwegian ruling elite.
Labours electoral debacle is a product of its turn to
the right and the alienation of much of its traditional working
class base. Since Labour nudged aside the minority coalition administration
of Kjell Bondevik to assume power in 2000, the party has pushed
ahead with the privatisation of state-owned assets, presided over
a continued decline in social welfare, and is generally perceived
as untrustworthy. Prior to the elections, the Norwegian trade
union federation, the LO, announced that it would support the
Socialist Left with an equal financial contribution to that given
to Labour.
After the elections, both Labour and the Centre Party refused
to enter into coalition negotiations with the radicals and former
Stalinists who largely comprise the Socialist Left. Neither was
Labour willing to come to any effective arrangement with the other
parties. Since World War Two, Labour has been the dominant party
in Norwegian politics, usually facing an opposition coalition
of the Centre Party, Christian Democrats, and Liberals. The minority
coalition government under Christian Democrat Kjell Bondevik only
survived between 1997-2000 given the tacit support of the Labour
Party, which brought it down after deciding to push for a closer
orientation to the European Union.
This time around, a number of alternative coalitions were possible,
which would have avoided handing the balance of power to the Progress
Party. Instead, the new centre-right coalition, mustering a mere
62 seats in the 165-seat Storting (parliament), immediately
sought an accommodation with the Progress Party, while Labour
prepared for a period of loyal opposition.
Having settled a squabble between the Christian Democrats and
the Conservatives over whether Bondevik or Conservative leader
Jan Petersen would be Prime Minister, on October 8 the coalition
announced that its policy would be to carry through tax cuts worth
25 billion Norwegian kronor ($2.8 billion) over its four-year
term, step up privatisation, while licensing the building of new,
controversial, gas-fired power stations. Hagen announced his support
for this policy and issued a list of 54 further demands as the
terms of a lasting agreement. These centred on the Progress party
being given the chairmanship of important Storting committees,
as well as promises to increase military spending. Aware that
the far right party was still too unstable and unpopular to immediately
enter government, the coalition nevertheless agreed to Progress
party deputy chair Siv Jensen chairing the Finance Committee,
which deals with the national budget, while John Alvheim will
chair the Social Affairs committee, concerned with social welfare
and health. This puts the Progress Party in highly influential
positions in two key areas of state policy directly concerned
with the living standards of the Norwegian working class.
Commenting on Hagens role, the Norwegian press was uniformly
favourable to the new arrangements. Almost 30 years of wandering
in the political wilderness is now over for Carl I. Hagen. The
first Conservative/Christian Democrat/Liberal government in the
history of Norway has brought Mr Hagen and the Progress Party
in from the cold, wrote Dagsavisen.
Dagbladet noted, The transition from political
pariah to necessary facilitator in the formation of a new centre-right
coalition has been remarkably swift for Progress Party chairman
Carl I. Hagen.
If anything, the press was more critical of former Labour Foreign
Minister Thorbjorn Jaglands appointment as chair of the
foreign affairs committee. This was hardly controversial, as the
government is not expected to adopt a different foreign policy
to Labour. Jagland, himself a former Prime Minister, is aggressively
in favour of the continued bombing of Afghanistan.
It was left to Odd Roger Enoksen, leader of the sidelined anti-EU
Centre Party, formerly the Agrarian Party, to complain, People
who claim that the coalitions political platform represents
centrist policies are mistaken. Policies which lead to a widening
of the income gap, a reduction in public services... are not centrist.
On October 26, Hagen sought to emphasise the Progresses Partys
newfound political influence by calling for a vote of confidence
in the new government, announcing that they might consider attempting
to replace ministers in the future. Since then, press commentary
has focused on the likelihood of more Progress Party ministers
being levered into position over the next period.
Considerable nervousness remains over giving too much power
to the fascists. Hagen himself was rejected for the role of Storting
chairman, a position he personally prized, on the grounds that
it would prove too divisive. Part of the thinking behind Bondevik
being chosen as Prime Minister is his public persona as a kindly,
Christian negotiator and compromiser, who can act as an acceptable
front-man for the frothing xenophobes propping up his administration.
See Also:
Scandinavian governments support Bushs
war against terrorism
[4 October 2001]
Norway: Conservatives and
far-right Progress Party on brink of power
[24 September 2001]
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