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While the Labor Party gets a catastrophic 18 percent nationally, the Center Party leaves with 5.9 percent in Oslo and former Labor leader Jan Bøhler directly to Parliament. Shows a survey of various Amedia newspapers.
– Many see that it is important to have Jan Bøhler at the Storting. Many ordinary workers identify with someone like him, who is deeply concerned that people have decent pay and working conditions, SP manager Trygve Slagsvold Vedum tells VG.
In the national poll, the Center Party is back in the 1920s and ends at 20.5 percent. Thus, Vedum is once larger than Støre and the Labor Party, after crazy progress from the previous Infact poll of up to 10.2 percentage points.
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This time, the Labor Party receives 18.4 percent in the Infact poll for Amedia’s Nettavisen, Bergensavisen, Nordlys and Trønder-Avisa newspapers.
That’s exactly half of the famous 36.9 ultimatum, which helped Jagland’s government resign after winning 35 percent in the 1997 parliamentary elections.
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It is also the third poll of Labor in the 1920s in a few days. On Wednesday, the party received 19 percent in a poll for Dagsavisen, FriFagbevegelse and Avisenes Nyhetsbyrå. Last weekend, the party received a poor 17.5 percent in the Nation and Class Struggle poll.
Also in Oslo, the old eagle fights between the parties.
In the poll, the party gets 14.3 percent support in Oslo. A drop of nearly seven percentage points since the 2019 local elections, when Raymond Johansen and his fellow party members received 20 percent of the vote.
However, the Oslo figures are based on responses from just 309 people with a margin of error of between 1.6 and 5.3 percent.
The Labor Party dispatched deputy leader Bjørnar Skjæran to comment on the poll on Thursday.
– This is a measure of real shit. It takes time to regain confidence when it is lost, and we have a great job to do, Labor MP Bjørnar Skjæran tells Nettavisen.
One of her predecessors as party vice president, Helga Pedersen, is now mayor of Tana Municipality in Finnmark.
She warns against the party going into a mode where people feel sorry for themselves or blame each other after deplorable polls.
– We’re too low. We’re not going to wake up farting or playing black money internally at the party. The political confrontation must be directed at the Conservatives and the Liberal Party, Pedersen told VG.
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She herself lives in a county where the would-be ruling partner, the Center Party, has performed well over time. Pedersen believes that the Socialist People’s Party and the Labor Party will be a powerful team in the fight to divide Troms and Finnmark counties into two independent counties again.
– Seen from Finnmark: Sp is a good ally in district politics, but it alone will not succeed in dissolving the forced county and reintroducing an active district politics. The road goes through the Labor Party. believes the mayor of Tana, who has previously been a minister, Labor vice president and county mayor.
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The leader of the SP, Trygve Slagsvold Vedum, agrees with Pedersen that the two parties that have a totally opposite development in support during the day, can be a good governing team.
– But are you worried that your potential government partner is digging under 20?
– No party can take a single vote for granted. We still have to move step by step towards the elections, then the Labor Party will have to answer for itself, Vedum replies.
Left at the micro level – Frp sinks
From other Amedia newspaper poll results, the ruling Venstre party is down to 2.1 percent (2.3), while the former ruling Frp party does not appear to have made any profit from its departure from government.
In this survey, Siv Jensen and Sylvi Listhaug & co score up to 6.6 percentage points, down to 8.6 percent. Therefore, they are the same size as SV.
In the Infact poll, the Conservatives are the largest party in the country with a support of 24.1 percent.