Norway Daily No. 204/02
Historical archive
Published under: Bondevik's 2nd Government
Publisher: Ministry of Foreign Affairs
News story | Date: 25/10/2002 | Last updated: 21/10/2006
The Royal Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, Oslo
Press Division – Editor: Mette Øwre
Norway Daily No. 204/02
Date: 25 October 2002
Record support for Carl I. Hagen (Dagsavisen)
Carl I. Hagen is smiling more broadly than ever before. The
Progress Party, of which he is chairman, now has the support of a
record 36.5 per cent of the electorate, and his lead over political
rivals has never been so large. "We are now joking that it is
possible to reach the 36.9 per cent which Gro Harlem Brundtland
managed to get in 1993. We are obviously riding a wave," said Mr
Hagen. In January, by comparison, only 15 per cent of voters said
they supported the party. In the past month support for the
Conservatives has dropped by 4.1 percentage points to a measly 14.1
per cent. Nevertheless, the Progress Party and the Conservatives
together amount to a majority.
Threat of dissolution (Dagsavisen)
Progress Party chairman Carl I. Hagen has hit back at those
politicians who continually point out that opinion poll results
should not carry so much weight because it is still another three
years until the next opportunity to change the composition of the
Storting. "I am painfully aware that opinion polls are not the same
thing as an election result. But that is something we can change,"
said Mr Hagen, pointing to the fact that constitutional amendments
are in the pipeline which could enable the national assembly to be
dissolved and new elections called before Christmas. "It is not
certain that the Progress Party would oppose such a move," he
added.
Budget meeting could end in breakdown (Aftenposten)
The ruling coalition parties and the Progress Party are due
to meet today for further budget negotiations. Officially the
Progress Party does not want talks to break down, but given the
stridency of the party since the Government’s proposal for next
year’s national budget was announced, it is certainly a
possibility. A breakdown of negotiations today does not
automatically mean that the Government will be knocking on the
Labour Party’s door. Aftenposten is given to understand that
negotiations could be elevated to the party leader level, which
would mean that Carl I. Hagen would emerge from the wings to take
command of the proceedings.
Demand: NOK 5 billion (Dagsavisen)
The Labour Party wants NOK 5 billion in adjustments if the
ruling coalition parties turn to them for help in getting the
Government’s proposed national budget for 2003 adopted by the
Storting. "The Government has announced an anti-social budget,
which we want to do something about," said Jens Stoltenberg, leader
of the Labour Party’s parliamentary group. The party has not yet
finalized its plan for where the NOK 5 billion will be coming from,
but Mr Stoltenberg says that Labour will reject proposals for an
increase in the additional cash benefit for children under three
and increased state support for private schools.
Labour branch chairmen say party should not return to office (Aftenposten)
If the Labour Party can put its stamp on the Government’s
budget proposal, the party’s branch chairmen would prefer to do a
deal with the Government. In the event of a political crisis,
Labour should not itself return to office at this time, they say.
This has become clear after conversations with 11 of the party’s 19
branch chairmen. "The last thing the Labour Party should do is to
let itself be dragged back into office right now," said Reidar
Åsgård, chairman of the Labour Party’s Hedmark branch.
Government to offer Progress Party pensions package (Verdens Gang)
In order to secure a budget agreement with the Progress
Party, the ruling coalition parties are thought to be willing to do
something about the current scheme under which the amount married
couples receive in pension payments is less than the amount two
single people are paid. The pension package is thought to be a
partial concession to the Progress Party’s demand for equal
treatment of married and cohabiting pensioners. But the
Conservatives and Christian Democrats are firm in their view that
there is no room this year for a reduction in taxes on wines and
spirits.
Borrowing boom a cause for concern (NTB)
Norwegians’ debts are growing faster than their incomes.
Finance Minister Per-Kristian Foss has warned the banks not to be
too open-handed when it comes to granting loans. "Any increase in
unemployment, fall in house prices or rise in interest rates will
increase the banks’ level of risk. There is no reason to criticize
the bank’s lending policies on a general basis, but there is always
room for a word of caution and a reminder not to set too much store
by the security offered by property values," Mr Foss told senior
executives of the country’s savings banks.
Cluster bombs tested in Norway (Nationen)
On 7 October this year, Norwegian and Belgian air force jets
dropped cluster bombs over the Hjerkinn firing range at Dovre. The
search for highly dangerous unexploded bomblets has not yet been
completed. The Defence Ministry has said it has no knowledge of the
affair. The Norwegian Storting has ordered the Government to work
towards an international ban on the controversial cluster bombs.
The story became known as a result of a bombing mistake.
Government rejects oil exploration request (Aftenposten)
Petroleum and Energy Minister Einar Steensnæs (Chr.Dem) has
flatly rejected Statoil’s request to start oil exploration
operations in the Barents Sea before an impact assessment for the
area has been completed. In fact, Mr Steensnæs has said that it
could take longer than anticipated before the impact assessment is
finished. He confirmed that the previous target for completion of
the impact assessment was the end of 2003. "The Government will
take as long as necessary, and the oil companies will have to put
up with it," said Mr Steensnæs.
Work harmful to health (Dagbladet)
Over one million Norwegian employees say that they have
experienced health problems as a result of stress at work. A high
tempo, unpredictable working days and fear of getting the sack are
some of the reasons. In a survey of 730 employees carried out by
MMI on behalf of the Directorate of Labour Inspection, as many as
40 per cent said that in the past year they had experienced such a
level of long-term stress at work that it had led to health
problems.
Worth Noting
- Foreign Minister Jan Petersen has said that the hostage
situation in Moscow is more proof of the insecurity into which the
world has fallen. "It will cost us a lot to secure ourselves
against terrorism. We do not have the situation fully under
control," admitted Mr Petersen.
(Dagbladet) - The Immigration Directorate (UDI) has started a hunt for
suspected disloyal employees, who it believes are leaking
information to the media. The UDI has previously reported such
alleged leaks to the police.
(Verdens Gang) - Newly qualified graduates are finding it difficult to get work.
Three out of ten law graduates who qualified this spring still do
not have a job. One in ten of those who graduated with a master’s
degree in economics in the autumn of 2001 were unemployed six
months later.
(Dagens Næringsliv) - Politicians who have decided that women should pay five times
more than men if they want to be sterilized are violating Norwegian
law, according to Gender Equality Ombud Kristin Mille.
(Dagsavisen) - Storebrand has endowed the Norwegian School of Economics and
Business (NHH) in Bergen with a five-year professorship in
insurance economics. The NHH is now set to hire an internationally
renowned Danish professor.
(Aftenposten) - The Storting is strengthening the requirement that teachers
react to incidents of bullying. Yesterday a parliamentary majority
voted that teachers who ignored the persecution of pupils could be
jailed for up to three months.
(Vårt Land) - Of the country’s 110 electricity providers, 70 have announced
further price rises which will come into effect in the next two
weeks. The remaining 40 will probably announce similar rises in the
next couple of weeks.
(Verdens Gang) - ABB’s 1,400 employees at its offshore construction yard in
Haugesund could be the biggest losers after an emergency sale of
the corporation’s global oil and gas division. ABB is to sell off
businesses with a total of 6,000 employees in Norway.
(Aftenposten) - Norway shares first place with Finland, Iceland and the
Netherlands in a global ranking of those countries which respect
press freedom the most. The ranking has been put together by the
international organization, Reporters without Borders.
(NTB)
Today’s comment from Aftenposten
Today’s meeting between the ruling coalition parties and the
Progress Party should be decisive for the continuation of
negotiations in the Storting over next year’s national budget.
However, that should not be interpreted as meaning we believe it is
realistic to think that the parties will reach an agreement. They
should either break off negotiations today or agree to go forward
with a completely different tone than the unworthy gamesmanship we
have seen up to now. From the moment the Government announced its
budget proposals, the Progress Party has treated the coalition
parties with a mixture of indulgence, mockery and contempt. More
than one month before Prime Minister Kjell Magne Bondevik even
needs to think about demanding a vote of confidence in the Storting
over the budget issue, 15 of the Progress Party’s 19 branch
chairmen have said that, if the PM does call for a vote of
confidence, the party should not back down, but throw the country
into a state of political crisis. And this after Carl I. Hagen has
rebuked the country’s Prime Minister and Finance Minister for
having opinions about the national budget which they, in the end,
must take responsibility for. And Siv Jensen has leaked her version
of the coalition parties’ offer to the media because she is far
more concerned about winning each individual round of the political
boxing match than creating majority support for a national budget.
No other chairman of the Storting’s Finance Committee has acted in
this way before. For their part, the coalition parties have not so
far demonstrated a particularly impressive political adroitness in
their discussions with the Progress Party, either. But their job is
anything but easy. There is a limit to how much a government can
allow itself to be pushed around by an opposition party which,
despite its surge in popularity in all the opinion polls, still
only has 25 out of the Storting’s 165 elected representatives.