The FRP leader in Oslo was not sure whether Siv Jensen should be re-elected to the Storting. Now you run the risk of being excluded.



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He wants to take the FRP in a national conservative direction. Now you run the risk of being excluded from Frp.

According to Dagsavisen, former FRP chairman Carl I. Hagen must have been with Geir Ugland Jacobsen when he met with the party’s organizing committee. Here where the two were photographed at the national FRP meeting in October. Photo: Ketil Blom Haugstulen

On Thursday afternoon, the Oslo FRP county council will discuss the future of county leader Geir Ugland Jacobsen. This is happening after a long dispute over the county party’s political course.

It was Dagsavisen who first wrote about the case. The newspaper states that the county board will consider opening an exclusion or suspension case against its own county leader.

– No comment, says the main character himself to the newspaper.

The organizing committee looks at the case

Aftenposten receives confirmation that an internal case against Jacobsen has been started and that he risks everything from a reprimand to exclusion.

A source informs Aftenposten that a decision was made at the FRP central board that the party organizing committee should consider the behavior of the county leader. The committee is involved when there are allegations of violations of FRP’s organizational or ethical guidelines.

There should now be a four-page memorandum with accusations against him. Some of them are about him publicly criticizing the party leader Siv Jensen.

But he has also disagreed with others in the party after a series of controversial statements. They cover everything from foreign and climate policy to immigration policy.

Won after party vote

Geir Ugland Jacobsen just won a vote for the leadership position in Oslo Frp this winter. The election was not just a personal choice, but also a fight for political leadership.

Jacobsen was elected at an annual meeting where the majority decided to make the FRP a “patriotic beacon.” Jacobsen himself was behind the proposal. He wants the FRP to develop in a national-liberal direction.

Siv Jensen was one of those who voted against the statement at the annual meeting. He later claimed that those who want an FRP that goes in the national conservative or national liberal direction are in the wrong party.

Geir Ugland Jacobsen’s line is supported by Carl I. Hagen and Christian Tybring-Gjedde. A source confirms to Aftenposten that Hagen was with Jacobsen when he met with the organizing committee for a discussion on Tuesday this week.

Jacobsen: “I’m not sure about Siv”

As the newly elected leader of the Oslo party, Jacobsen clearly stated that it was not entirely certain that FRP leader Jensen would rank first on the FRP list in Oslo. On the other hand, he was absolutely sure that Tybring-Gjedde should be high on the list.

– I’m not sure about Siv. She has been a good party leader, but when it comes to political leadership, we do not overlap, she explained to TV2.

The FRP leader himself told the NRK in June this year that Jacobsen and his circle are “a small group in Oslo who choose to try to ignore all the decisions and strategies that the rest of the party has chosen.”

– Of course it’s not acceptable, he said.

The selection is rigged

Jacobsen, who is a supporter of Donald Trump, recently told VG that there are “dozens” of sources that support claims that the US presidential election was rigged.

– But the deception is now so obvious that Biden is unlikely to become president, he said.

Later, the deputy leader of FRP, Sylvi Listhaug, contradicted him.

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