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Europe
Wealthy Norway Swings Right in Election
2013-09-10
[An Nahar] Norway shifted right in elections Monday, setting the stage for a new Conservative-led government with the anti-immigrant Progress Party, two years after Musselmen-hating Anders Behring Breivik's deadly rampage.

Early projections reported by the government's statistical office immediately after voting ended at 9:00 pm (1900 GMT) showed the four parties on the center-right winning 93 of the 169 seats in parliament.

According to the same projections, the center-left coalition led by incumbent Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg, in power since 2005, won 75 seats, while an extreme leftist party garnered one seat.

The most often-cited scenario is a minority government made up of the Conservatives and the Progress Party. The smaller Christian Democrats and the Liberals would not be in the government due to disagreements with the populist right, but would provide backing in parliament to pass legislation.

Based on this scenario, Conservative Party leader Erna Solberg, 52, is the nation's next prime minister.

Solberg's victory comes in spite of the fact that the oil-rich nation has fared exceptionally well under Stoltenberg, also the leader of the Labor Party.

"The country is doing pretty well, but that's because of the oil, not because of the leaders," said a 29-year-old voter as he emerged from exercising his democratic right at Oslo's city hall.

Having cast his ballot in favor of the Progress Party, he added: "It's time to get a new government".

Stoltenberg's two consecutive terms mark an unusually long tenure, even in politically stable Norway.

During this period, he has steered the nation through Europe's worst post-war economic crisis, warding off any threat to Norway's very high standard of living.

"Even if many things are going well, there are always many things that could go even better," Stoltenberg told the TV2 news network earlier Monday.

Significantly, one of the top election issues was the proper use of Norway's oil fund, which at $750 billion (570 billion euros) is the world's largest sovereign wealth fund.

Given the general material wealth, and the lack of any serious discontent in society, the weak showing of Stoltenberg's coalition is mostly put down to power fatigue.

"Norway is one of the richest countries in the world, if not the richest, but the generation who made the nation what it is today is not getting to harvest the fruits," said retiree Espen Ek, who added he had voted "for change".
Posted by:Fred

#4  "Solberg & Tony Abbott in AUS - two guys Obama won't call for a while"

Lucky them.
Posted by: Barbara   2013-09-10 15:54  

#3  Solberg & Tony Abbott in AUS - two guys Obama won't call for a while...
Posted by: Raj   2013-09-10 10:43  

#2  ...the weak showing of Stoltenberg's coalition is mostly put down to power fatigue.

If you read the news. Then again the common folk seem to be aware of what the 'news' doesn't report but something government is suppose to act on.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2013-09-10 08:23  

#1  They hinting the oil fund gets wasted and corruption and crony-ism abound?
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2013-09-10 01:39  

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