Fremskrittspartiet

Fremskrittspartiet (literally, The Progress Party) is an right-wing populist [1] political party in Norway. It is best known internationally for its association with Anders Behring Breivik, a former member of the party's youth-wing.[1] The party is known for appealing to both moderates and extremists by speaking with "two voices" — different politicians communicating to different audiences,[1] as exemplified by a seeming discontinuity between Siv Jensen's rants about "creeping Islamicization" and the party's announcement to deny membership to people involved in the Islamophobic group SIAN.[note 1]

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History

—Carl I. Hagen, who basically was the party[2]

The party's politics have changed back and forth through time. The party was established in the 1970s by Anders Lange as a Norwegian version of the tea baggers,[3] campaigning for sweeping tax cuts and starve the beast-style attacks on public expenditure. The founder is infamous for having voiced support of the apartheid regime in South Africa, but also for reputedly having received financial support from them.[4]

From its humble beginnings as a single-purpose party with an all-powerful leader, it evolved under Carl I. Hagen's leadership into a democratic and moderately popular libertarian party with a full political platform. However, in 1994, in an unprecedented move, Hagen expelled all its high-ranking libertarian members in a mass cleansing at the yearly congress. The congress was held at a place called Bolkesjø, and, as a pun, the event is often referred to as "Dolkesjø": "Dagger Lake". Left were only the populists, with Hagen as the undisputed ruler, and his 'statement politics'. That would be the turning point in the party's transition from libertarianism to pure-bred right-wing populism, and its subsequent rise to power, the party which we know today.

Today

The party entered its first cabinet, a coalition with the Conservative Party, in 2013. As a party popular with protest voters, the moderation of the party and its transition from opposition to office under Siv Jensen's leadership has had a significant negative impact on its poll results.

So what political issues do they support?

Basically whatever the individuals of the party want them to at the moment, regardless of any underlying principles or ideology. Some longstanding and time-tested issues, however, are:

High ranking party members have often been compared to the French party Front National of Jean-Marie Le Pen.[7] although they probably have more in common with more moderate populist parties such as Alternativ für Deutschland and UK Independence Party in that they are less blatantly racist than Le Pen's party.

The Progress Party is likely to have its most hardcore base move over to a new, supposedly centrist but actually climate-change-denying,[8] racist,[9] and extremely anti-immigrant party, Selvstendighetspartiet (The Independence Party).

Nevertheless, as of 2019 The Progress Party continued to try to appeal to voters by using conspiracy theory motifs, such as allusions to a great replacement.[10]

Notable members

  • Anders Behring Breivik, a mass murderer, was a member of the party for a period of several years and the party's deputy youth leader in Oslo. He did, however, leave the party in 2007, deeming them too moderate.
  • Siv JensenFile:Wikipedia's W.svg – party leader since 2006.
  • Sylvi Listhaug, who advocates that immigrants return to their countries of origin voluntarily and who, as health minister, stated that people should be allowed to eat, drink and smoke as much as they please[11]
  • Christian Tybring-Gjedde, a member of parliament for the party, and a noted islamophobe and climate change denier.
gollark: This is electric fields. This might be helpful: https://phet.colorado.edu/sims/html/charges-and-fields/latest/charges-and-fields_en.html
gollark: Gravitational potential, not gravity itself.
gollark: Also gravitational potential. Which is just voltage but for gravity.
gollark: It's the time on the proprietary Macron space station.
gollark: Which is not without precedent, but still.

See also

Notes

  1. For more details, see SIAN#Incidents.

References

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