Eight political parties were represented in the Norwegian parliament prior to the election, all of whom went on to contest the 2017 election. • The
Labour Party (Ap) is with its 55 seats in parliament the largest party of the 2013-2017 parliament. Labour describes itself as a
social-democratic party of the
centre-left. The party is led by former minister of foreign affairs
Jonas Gahr Støre, who has served as party leader and
leader of the opposition since June 2014. • The
Conservative Party (H) is the largest party of the incumbent government. Currently, the Conservatives hold 48 seats, after having garnered close to 27 percent of the vote in the previous election. The Conservatives' party leader is Prime Minister
Erna Solberg. The Conservative Party is considered to be a moderate
centre-right party in the
Norwegian political spectrum, and it officially subscribes to the
liberal conservative ideology. • The
Progress Party (FrP) is led by
Siv Jensen and currently serves as the junior partner in the
Solberg cabinet. The party identifies as
classical liberal and
conservative-liberal. Political scientists broadly consider it a
right-wing populist party, a label the party denies. • The
Christian Democratic Party (KrF) is a
centre to
centre-right party, based on
Christian democratic values. The party is led by
Knut Arild Hareide, and participated in the 2013 election as a proponent of the centre-right coalition led by the Conservatives. • The
Centre Party (Sp) is the fifth largest party in the Norwegian legislature, with 10 seats. Between 2005 and 2013 the party served as a junior partner in the
Red-Green government. The party is led by
Trygve Slagsvold Vedum. The party is centrist and primarily
agrarian, with some conservative and some
liberal factions. • The
Liberal Party (V) of
Trine Skei Grande currently holds 9 seats in the Norwegian parliament. It claims to be the sole
social-liberal party in the country, and positions itself in the centre of Norwegian politics. The Liberals have a close relationship with the Christian Democrats. • The
Socialist Left Party (SV) is the second smallest party in parliament, and campaigned for a third term as a part of the Red-Green coalition government in 2013. The party sees itself as
democratic socialist and environmentalist. Since 2012,
Audun Lysbakken has chaired the party. • The
Green Party (MDG) made its debut in the Norwegian parliament in the 2013 election, gaining a single seat from the
Oslo district. The Greens have no official party leader, but rather two national spokespersons. Currently, these spokespersons are
Une Aina Bastholm and
Rasmus Hansson. The party distances itself from the
left-
right axis, and identifies as an
environmentalist party. Additionally, the far-left
Red Party led by
Bjørnar Moxnes secured its first seat via a direct mandate in Oslo district. It had failed to secure representation in previous elections. The party is officially Communist in orientation and is a successor to the
Red Electoral Alliance, which had previously won a seat in the
1993 election. ==Campaign==