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Red leader Bjørnar Moxnes asks for a response from the Labor leader.
In Sentio’s September Nettavisen poll, Labor Party leader Jonas Gahr Støre relies on the Red or Green Party (ODM) for a majority on the red-green side.
But Rødt’s leader, Bjørnar Moxnes, fears that Støre still won’t go to them.
– I fear a slalom government buying a majority in the Storting from case to case, Moxnes tells Nettavisen, with a possible minority government in mind.
Because the Center Party has also made it clear that they want nothing more than a government based on the Center Labor Party.
-The worst that can happen is that they fix the fiscal policy with the conservatives and the welfare policy with the bourgeois parties, so that there is no arrangement with the benefit of welfare, he sighs.
See the result of all parts below.
– Playing with the conservatives
Moxnes is now asking Støre and Center Party leader Trygve Slagsvold Vedum for clarification exactly one year before next year’s decisive parliamentary elections.
– I ask that the Labor Party and the Center Party provide clarification to their voters. Will they cooperate on his left and with Rødt, or will they get into the center and even engage in politics with the conservatives, he wonders.
See Støre’s answer below in the case.
Rødt’s leader emphasizes that both Støre and Vedum, if they want to rule, will likely depend on Rødt’s support in any case if there is a majority for a change on the red-green side, as Sentio’s September poll shows.
Vedum himself told Nettavisen on Wednesday that he has a clear plan ahead of the election:
– We want a center-party-Labor government, he said, which received almost 15 percent support in the poll.
Also read: This is how Jonas will crush Erna
– Norway must get a new course
However, the fight against the border barrier will be absolutely decisive for what kind of government Norway will end after the 2021 elections.
– If we exceed four percent, Erna must go, and if we fall below and KrF arrives, there will be four new years with Erna Solberg, thinks Moxnes.
In Nettavisen’s September poll, Rødt ends up at exactly the four percent barrier threshold, giving the party more equalizing mandates at the Storting. With such a result, the party would have doubled its parliamentary group compared to the current one, the place that the party leader occupies today.
– Our aim is, of course, to hold record elections and get a new government, but also to secure a new political course for Norway, he says.
Also in August, Støre relied on Rødt for a majority, and Moxnes then filed several demands for them to support a Labor-led government. Read more about the requirements here.
– Stop the advance of the rich
Rødt’s main demand is that the differences between people be reduced.
– The advance of the rich and powerful must be stopped and the problems of the common people overlooked. We also need to ensure that billions do not flow to welfare speculators, and a fair environmental policy that not only exists for those with good advice who live in big cities, says Moxnes, who doubts there will be major changes if we achieve new red-green government. , similar to what was passed with the Labor Party, the Socialist People’s Party and the Center Party.
– We have had a red-green government without the differences being reduced, and without achieving a non-profit welfare. So strong red is the best guarantee that we will actually achieve political change, he says.
– Do you want to be yourself in the government?
– No, but we are open to discussing a cooperation agreement with the parties that obtain the majority, says Moxnes.
Also read: If this happens, Erna wins again: it may be the first in recent Norwegian history
Noise: – Trash Warning
Labor leader Jonas Gahr Støre, however, fights back against Moxnes’ criticism.
– The Labor Party will cooperate well with all parties that want a new direction for Norway. Parties that want a society with fewer differences, a stronger welfare state, and a just climate policy that reduces emissions and creates jobs. But in government, we have said, and insist, that our natural choice is our former partners Sp and SV, Støre tells Nettavisen about their plans, noting:
– We have no plans to enter into cooperation agreements with parties outside the government.
Støre rejects Moxnes’ warning that they will seek the support of the Conservatives, which the Red leader believes will be “the worst that can happen.”
– A stronger welfare state that is available to everyone, regardless of wallet and place of residence, is a key issue for the Labor Party. It implies both a fair tax system and the fight against privatization and fragmentation of health and care, that is, the opposite of what the right-wing government represents. So this is a completely nonsensical warning from Rødt, he says.
The result of the September survey:
Worst in 17 years
But even though there is a majority for the red-green side in Sentio’s September poll, the Labor Party is struggling with support. The Labor Party is back by 1.2 percentage points from August and gets a result of 21.8 percent.
This is the worst result the party has had in Sentio polls since September 2003. The Labor Party loses voters to the other red-green parties in particular, but it also loses 27,000 voters to the Conservatives, figures from background of the survey.
– This is way below the level the Labor Party wants to be at, but I am optimistic, Labor MP Bjørnar Skjæran told Nettavisen on Wednesday.
Also read: Mimir Kristjànsson: – Einar Gerhardsen would have turned in the grave if he had seen what Norwegian politics has been reduced to
Q: – Gambling games
The online newspaper has also asked SP leader Trygve Slagsvold Vedum for a comment on the case, but does not want to comment on Moxnes’ move.
– He does not have the opportunity to comment on the Moxnes proposal on the games and the government clique in Oslo, because he is willing to fight for the industrial worker and the taxi driver, Vedum’s adviser at the Storting, Lars Vangen, tells Nettavisen.
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