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Ugland Jacobsen was barred from the Progress Party at a central board meeting Tuesday night, on the basis of what deputy party leader Sylvi Listhaug describes as “a series of trampling.”
In June, Ugland Jacobsen proposed to expel the party leader Siv Jensen from the parliamentary list to Oslo Frp. Then, among other things, I would have a place for Carl I. Hagen on the list. Hagen was the leader of the Progress Party from 1977 to 2006.
– I’m sorry
– I am surprised, speechless and sorry. Beyond that, I have no comment. says Tybring-Gjedde to Dagbladet.
The FRP politician emphasizes that “it obviously applies to the whole process that the party has initiated against the Oslo Frp.”
After the central board meeting in Frp on Tuesday afternoon, it became clear that the county team will be appointed an interim board comprised of Ketil Solvik-Olsen, Per-Willy Amundsen, Peter N. Myhre, Jon Georg Dale and Kari Kjønaas Kjos. Of these, only Peter Myhre is from Oslo.
Carl I. Hagen: – Shocked.
FRP Nestor Carl I. Hagen is surprised that county leader Geir Ugland Jacobsen in the Oslo FRP has been excluded from the party.
– I’m in shock and I don’t understand anything. I look forward to some explanations, and I don’t understand them tonight, is Hagen’s short comment to NRK.
The background for the exclusion are several statements by Ugland Jacobsen that are interpreted as distrust of the party leader, Siv Jensen. Among other things, he has stated that he would reject Jensen from the Storting list in Oslo and that he would lead the party in a national conservative direction.
– Enough now. There is a limitSaid FRP deputy leader Sylvi Listhaug at an urgently convened press conference Tuesday night, where she posed with party leader Siv Jensen.
– I don’t want to make any more noise
Ugland Jacobsen made it clear Tuesday night that he will not appeal the decision and now says he is done with the game.
– I don’t want to make more noise than there is already around Frphe tells NTB.
– Ugland Jacobsen wants a completely different party. It is perfectly fine to disagree with the leadership, and there is a high ceiling in the Progress Party, but there is no room for disloyalty to decisions made legally, says Siv Jensen.
Siv Jensen has a clear message for those who want the FRP to become a national conservative party.
– There are those who have wanted it differently. Must be like this. But a large and emphatic majority have put their foot down and said what we should be and what we should not be. One must relate to what a great majority has declared, and relate to it or find something else to do, warns the party leader