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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
Norway: Conservatives and far-right Progress Party on brink
of power
By Steve James
24 September 2001
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The September 10 general election marked a historic collapse
for the Labour Party and herald major re-alignments in Norwegian
politics. A new government has not yet been formed, and Labour
Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg remains in office. But Labour,
long the largest party in Norwegian politics, saw its share of
the vote plummet to 24 percent, down by 10.7 percent from the
last elections in 1997, and their lowest result since 1927. Of
the 165 seats in the Storting (Norwegian parliament), Labour
now holds only 43, down from 65, making its removal from office
virtually certain. As the results became clear, Labour Foreign
Secretary Thorbjørn Jagland announced, We have lost
credibility on what has been our historic missionthe fight
for social justice and for the weakest members of our society.
Hitherto, the principal opposition to Labour has been the Centre
Alliance coalition of the Centre Party, Christian Democrats and
Liberals. The Centre Alliance last held power from 1997 to 1999
under Christian Democrat Prime Minister Kjell Bondevik. This time
around, however, the Christian Democrats lost three seats, bringing
their total to 22, while the Conservatives won 38, an increase
of 15 seats. The Conservative Party has been the principal beneficiary
both from Labours long-term decline and from a collapse
in the vote for the far-right Progress Party.
Progress split earlier in the year, following a spate of scandals
and sordid internal feuds between its unreconstructed fascist
elements and supporters of the current party leader, the populist
demagogue Carl I. Hagen, who wanted to repackage the party along
the lines of the National Alliance in Italy. Although Progress
retained 26 seats and 14 percent of the vote, their result was
much lower than their share of some earlier opinion polls; for
a brief period last year they were at the top of Norway's opinion
polls when the party held 30 percent of voting intentions.
Nevertheless, Hagens voice of the common man
image did attract a confused protest vote from sections of workers,
and the Progress Partys anti-immigrant and anti-welfare
ravings have been utilised as a means to push official politics
to the right. The party is still positioned to play a major role
in Norwegian politics.
The Conservative Partys success has triggered efforts
to form a new governing coalition along with the Christian Democrats,
the Liberals (who won 2 seats) and the Progress Party. Even if
Progress does not formally participate in government, its support
is crucial and would mark a new stage in the growth of the partys
political influence. Negotiations between all the potential coalition
partners have begun, with either Kjell Bondevik or Conservative
leader Jan Petersen likely to become the next prime minister.
The discussions and horse-trading could easily last into October,
when the new Storting is due to assemble for the first
time.
Underlying both the Labour Partys collapse and the rise
of right wing parties is a deep going social and political polarisation.
As Norwegian capital seeks to project its interests internationally,
it has intensified attacks on social welfare at homethereby
undermining the long-standing policies of social welfare on which
support for the Labour Party was based. Jens Stoltenberg came
to power presenting himself as the Norwegian Tony Blair.
Norwegian industrydominated primarily by oil and gas,
but also with significant telecoms, shipping and engineering interestsis
a significant player in the world economy, despite the countrys
tiny size, with a population of only 4.5 million. Under Labour,
the nationalised oil company Statoil was partially privatised
to allow it to compete globally with rivals such as Exxon and
British Petroleum in the carve-up of assets in the Caspian Sea.
During the election campaign, Statoil signed a deal to supply
gas to Poland and hopes to expand throughout the Baltic region.
Statoil is already a major influence in efforts to further deregulate
the entire European energy industry. The countrys lucrative
telecoms and engineering industries have also helped create a
newly rich layer within Norwegian society, which is desperate
to safeguard its wealth and which views social provisions for
the working class as an intolerable drain.
Commenting on the implications of the election for the wealthy,
newspaper Dagens Næringsliv positively salivated
at the prospects, the Conservatives rise and Labours
fall paves the way for more good news on the tax front. The residential
housing tax will be abolished, increased use of overtime will
be permitted, surgery paid for by employers will not be taxed,
support for the dividend tax will weaken, and the tax on share
options could be eased... There is already much to be happy abouteven
before a new government has been put together. Hopefully, this
is just the beginning.
Although Norway has one of the highest levels of per capita
income in the world, income inequality is increasing dramatically.
According to the Norwegian governments own statistics, between
1986 and 1997 inequality increased at one of the highest rates
of all the leading industrialised OECD countries. Over the decade,
the wealth of the top ten percent of the population increased
by 34 percent, while the bottom ten percents share only
grew by between five and six percent. The government cites share
options and dividends as the primary source of increasing inequality.
A more recent survey revealed 126,000 people living on incomes
below what was described as a minimum budget. Labours response
has been to attempt to curtail social spending and force welfare
claimants back into low wage work.
The election itself was dominated by social questions, which,
despite the immediate right wing triumph, point to the isolation
of the Norwegian ruling class. This was hinted at during and before
the campaign, with elements within the trade union and Labour
bureaucracy such as Thorbjørn Berntsen warning of the social
consequences of Labour policy.
Last year, Norway was brought to a standstill by a short general
strike over the bi-annual wage negotiations, which took both business
and trade union officials by surprise. In May this year, the Federation
of Trade Unions (LO) announced an historic 500,000 kroner ($56,400)
donation to the middle class radical Socialist Left party, who
gained 14 seats in the election, taking their total to 23. Subsequent
opinion polls have shown the Socialist Left sustaining their increased
support, also winning youthful voters from the Conservatives.
During the campaign, all the parties, presented their policies
in terms directed towards the social concerns of ordinary Norwegianshospital
care, schools, day-care centres and so on. But the Conservatives
were able to win support for their programme of tax cuts because
of Labours record in government. Just last July, Labour
increased indirect taxation on consumer goods, taxes that fall
most heavily on the working class, and pushed forward the privatisation
of oil, telecoms, and rail networks. As a result, its election
promises to increases health and social funding, provide more
hospitals and day care centres were simply not believed.
Labour was also caught out surreptitiously seeking to implement
the exact opposite of its stated policies. Despite Stoltenbergs
denials and campaign promises, a document emerged which made clear
that until last April he was seeking trade union support for a
cut in sickness benefits, which would reduce payments for the
first 16 days of illness. Labours promises to reduce day-care
centre charges also collapsed when advertising posters promoting
the policy were suddenly withdrawn days before the election. In
the end, nobody believed them, preferring either the Conservatives
calls for wide-ranging tax cuts, or the Socialist Lefts
call for a 6-hour working day.
The Socialist Lefts origins lie in the Socialist Peoples
Party, formed in 1961 on the basis of opposition to NATO and nuclear
weapons. The party emerged out of a petition circulated at the
height of the Cold War, calling for Norwegian foreign policy to
be independent of both US and Soviet influence. Norway shares
a border with Russia. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the party
focused on opposition to the then European Economic Community
(EEC), forerunner to the European Union, forming an alliance with
the Stalinist Norwegian Communist Party, which merged with the
Socialist Left in 1975.
Subsequently the party has also concentrated on environmental
issues, presenting itself as a red/green alliance proposing environmentally
friendly, welfare-orientated social policies within the framework
of the nation state.
It is an integral and trusted part of bourgeois politics in
Norway. In recent years, one of its leading members, Erik Solheim,
was the countrys delegate in attempts to negotiate a peace
settlement between the Sri Lankan government and the Tamil Tigers
(LTTE). Despite its origins, the majority of its MPs supported
the NATO attack on Yugoslavia in 1999.
The rise in the Socialist Left vote will radically increase
the level of financial support it receives under state political
funding arrangements, as will as the extent to which it is courted
by the trade union bureaucracy. Should negotiations between the
Conservatives and its various potential coalition partners fail,
the most viable alternative would be a Labour-led coalition with
the Socialist Left. This is an arrangement that is already being
advocated by sections of the trade union bureaucracy and the Socialist
Left, although to date the Labour leadership has ruled it out.
See Also:
Norway's far-right Progress
Party splits
[25 April 2001]
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