Parliamentary parties •
Labour Party (
Arbeiderpartiet), leader:
Jens Stoltenberg. The Labour Party was the largest party in the 2009–2013
Storting, and the majority party in
Stoltenberg's Second Cabinet. They got 35.4% of the votes and won 64 seats in the 2009 election. The party is primarily
social democratic. •
Progress Party (
Fremskrittspartiet), leader:
Siv Jensen. The Progress Party was the largest opposition party in the 2009–2013 Storting, but have been the third-largest party in most public opinion polls of early 2013. The party is primarily
right-libertarian. •
Conservative Party (
Høyre), leader:
Erna Solberg. The Conservative Party was the second-largest opposition party in the 2009–2013 Storting, with 17.2% of the votes in the last elections. However, the party has been the largest opposition party in most of the public opinion polls in early 2013. •
Socialist Left Party (
Sosialistisk Vensterparti), leader:
Audun Lysbakken. The Socialist Left Party was the second-largest government party. It is a democratic socialist party. •
Centre Party (
Senterpartiet), leader:
Liv Signe Navarsete. The Centre Party was the third-largest party in the current government. It is
agrarian, staunchly
eurosceptic and serves the interests of farmers and people in rural areas. •
Christian Democratic Party (
Kristelig Folkeparti), leader:
Knut Arild Hareide. The Christian Democratic Party was represented with 10 members of the 2009–2013 Storting. •
Liberal Party (
Venstre), leader:
Trine Skei Grande. The Liberal Party is a centrist and liberal party. They earned 3.9% of the votes in the 2009 elections, and thus they were only represented with 2 seats in parliament, due to their failure at passing the electoral threshold of 4% on a nationwide scale. •
Green Party (
Miljøpartiet de Grønne), leader:
Hanna Marcussen, Harald A. Nissen. The Greens experienced what has been described as a breakthrough in the 2011 Norwegian local elections. In this election the Greens won their first parliamentary seat.
Extra-parliamentary parties •
Red Party (
Rødt), leader:
Bjørnar Moxnes. The Red Party is a communist political party on the far-left. With 1.3% of the votes, the party failed to get any parliamentary seats in the 2009 general election. •
Pensioners' Party (
Pensjonistpartiet), leader: Einar Lonstad. Following the last legislative election in Norway, the Pensioners' Party became the 9th largest party, with 0.4% of the votes. The party's primary aim is to promote the
interests of pensioners and elderly people. It ran in only 12 counties. •
Christian Unity Party (
Kristent Samlingsparti), leader: Morten Selven. The party is a Christian ultra-conservative party. Running in only 12 counties, it received 0.2% of the votes in the 2009 election. •
The Christians (
De Kristne), leader: Erik Selle. The party, founded in 2011 in
Bømlo Municipality, participated in the local elections in Bømlo and received 6.5% of the votes and two representatives in the local council. The party is founded on Christian conservative values, and is considered to lie between the Christian Democratic and the Christian Unity parties on the political spectrum. It ran in all counties. •
The Democrats (
Demokratene i Norge), leader:
Elisabeth Rue Strencbo. A nationalist and populist party, it received 0.1% of the votes in the 2009 election. It ran in all counties. •
Liberal People's Party (
Det Liberale Folkeparti), leader: Vegard Martinsen. The party is
libertarian, and advocates minimal government. It received below 0.1% of the votes in the 2009 election, and ran in only six counties. •
Coastal Party (
Kystpartiet), leader: Bengt Stabrun Johansen. A national conservative party, known for defending the rights of fishermen and whalers in northern Norway. It received only 0.2% of the vote in the 2009 elections, but in 2001 won as much as 10% in
Nordland county, where it secured a single seat in the national parliament, held by the well-known
whaling activist
Steinar Bastesen. The party ran in all counties. •
Pirate Party (
Piratpartiet), leader: Øystein Jakobsen. Founded on the basis of the better-known international Pirate Parties in late 2012, its main cause is transparency in government. This was the party's first election. It ran in all counties. •
Communist Party (
Norges Kommunistiske Parti), leader: Svend Haakon Jacobsen. The
Marxist–Leninist party is one of the oldest in Norway, dating back to 1923. It received under 0.1% of the votes in the 2009 election. It ran in seven counties. • People's List Against Oil Drilling in
Lofoten,
Vesterålen and
Senja (
Folkeliste mot oljeboring i Lofoten, Vesterålen og Senja), first candidate: Øystein Meier Johannessen. A
single-issue party against oil drilling in the Lofoten, Vesterålen and Senja, an issue of great debate in Norway. This was the first election for the party, which ran a single candidate in Nordland. • People's Power (
Folkemakten), leader: Siv Gørbitz. The party was founded in 2012, and advocates
direct democracy. It fielded a single candidate in Hordaland. •
Society Party (
Samfunnspartiet), leader: Øystein Meier Johannessen. An
anarchist party. It received below 0.1% of the votes in the 2009 election. It only ran in four counties. • A Hospital for Alta (
Sykehus til Alta). First participation by this single-issue party which advocated the building of a new and modern hospital in
Alta and ran only in
Finnmark. ==Leadership changes==