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– We are quite Nazis on this issue in front of the ministers and others, Erna Solberg said today from the Storting rostrum.
It was during today’s throne speech that Erna Solberg takes on a somewhat untraditional depiction of the government’s attitude toward high executive salaries in the public sector.
– The state should not be the salary leader in executive salaries, he continued.
“Pretty Nazi” is not a parliamentary term, but the chairman of the Storting, Tone Trøen (H), does not beat Erna Solberg for the use of the term.
Frp to Erna: – Arrogant
– Common in Bergen
Solberg, on the other hand, is hit by the time he spent on the podium.
What does a “rather Nazi” attitude towards executive salaries really mean, Erna Solberg?
– This means that the government gives clear messages that the state should not be the salary leader in executive salaries, but rather be in the lowest strata. The state must remain competitive, Solberg tells Dagbladet after the episode.
– Are there other political areas in which your government is quite Nazi?
– These were executive salaries, I replied. I used the popular Nazi term because I think the government is perceived as a little clear that it is not the job of the state to be a wage leader.
– And if one is the first to say something about Nazi ideology, then is “a little clear” a decent summary?
– Let me put it this way: being a Nazi in Bergen is a completely normal expression of being strict. If it is unusual for Easterners to hear this, then I think any Bergen resident can confirm that being a Nazi is being strict, says the Prime Minister.
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Surprised Vedum
The Nazi proposal came during a debate against the leader of the SP, Trygve Slagsvold Vedum.
He accused Solberg of allowing unreasonable pay differentials in state-owned companies like Vy.
– I think it’s a surprising use of language. I understand that Erna Solberg thinks it is verbal, but politicians are always a bit cautious in the Storting. Erna Solberg must remember that. Usually the president would probably get beaten up, but she was probably a bit surprised herself, Vedum tells Dagbladet.
– Vy’s manager earns NOK 5.5 million per year, including bonuses. It is not very strict and, after all, it is much more than the Prime Minister himself earns. This is typically the government: cuts on the one hand and wage matches on the other.
– He will think that he regrets
Vedum emphasizes that he believes that the salary differences between top managers and regular employees in many public companies are even more striking than Solberg’s vocabulary.
– I want to believe that you regret the use of the word Nazi in the Storting, he says.
– The director of Vy has a total remuneration of more than five million crowns. And that’s what Erna Solberg describes as strict. I don’t agree with her, adds Vedum.