Position Like its predecessors, the
Socialist People's Party and the
Information Committee of the Labour Movement against Norwegian membership in the European Community, the Socialist Left is a left-wing party which favours a
welfare state and taxation of the wealthy.
Finn Gustavsen, former leader of the Socialist People's Party, believed that the
Labour Party were not
socialists, and the only socialist force in parliament were members from the
Socialist Electoral League. He was one of the main opponents of Norwegian membership in the European Community, saying the organisation showed how "evil and stupid"
capitalism really was. According to a 2002 poll, one out of four members in the Socialist Left wanted Norway to join the European Union. The party's election program for the
2001 Norwegian parliamentary election stated that the party was a "socialist party" with a vision of a Norway without social injustice. Since its inception, the party has promoted itself as socialist. Since 2003, the party has been portrayed as
social democratic by some in the Norwegian media, as
democratic socialist by others inside and outside Norway, and has been categorised as
eco-socialist, The former leader
Audun Lysbakken self-described as a
revolutionary,
socialist, and
Marxist in 2005. He believes the party to be a democratic socialist one. The Socialist Left also advocates the replacement of capitalism with socialism, arguing that "We shape our own future. It is possible to create a fair and environmentally friendly world, a society where wealth and power are fairly distributed, with freedom and equal rights for all and where we live together within nature's tolerance limit. A lot has to change. Millions live with oppression and war, inequality in power and wealth is growing and the environmental crisis threatens our livelihood. The capitalist system must be replaced – nationally and globally – by a democratic, sustainable and needs-based economic system. It is socialism."
Education Education has been one of main campaign issues since Kristin Halvorsen became party leader.
Øystein Djupedal was elected
Minister of Education and Research, and held that position for two years. He was replaced by fellow Socialist Left politician
Bård Vegar Solhjell. Halvorsen took over the ministry in late 2009. Djupedal's first assignment in office was granting to "even out social differences" between
ethnic minorities. The party believes that everyone has the right to free access to
kindergarten.
Anders Folkestad, leader of the
Confederation of Unions for Professionals, was not pleased with Djupedal's efforts during his term in office, saying that "Djupedal has created much uncertainty and a mess after he became Minister of Education and Research. Many had great expectations, but he is sure lagging behind from the time when he was a sideliner." Djupedal was heavily criticised by the Norwegian media for his controversial and bizarre statements. In late 2005, it was estimated that students studying general, business, and administrative studies would save up to under the
red–green coalition; school books became free when the coalition took power. The party wants to reduce the number of
private schools, and Djupedal said they are of no use. Bård Vegar Solhjell stated he believed government-funded schools helped "smoothing social inequality", commenting: "Many of those who remain outside the labor market have received lack of training from school. It prevents them from contributing to the community. Parties on the right often confuse
social security and welfare schemes as the problem; however, we tend to look at why they are struggling. There are systematic connections between social background and lack of training – it is a class question where something is needed to be done." Others believe that the party should
nationalise non-public schools.
Torbjørn Urfjell, former leader of the
Socialist Youth chapter in
Vest-Agder, said: "School and adolescence is too important to be left to the market. Therefore, they should be taken back." During the
2005 Norwegian parliamentary election, the party promised to increase resources to
public schools, believing that more money would lead to fewer pupils per teacher, and more individualised and personal instructions.
Environment The party has held the office of
Minister of the Environment since 2005, first by
Helen Bjørnøy, followed by
Erik Solheim and since 2012 by
Bård Vegar Solhjell. During the
2009 Norwegian parliamentary election, the party promoted itself as the biggest and strongest
green party in Norway. The party was highly vocal against
oil drilling in
Lofoten and
Vesterålen during the election campaign. A large minority within the party are opposed to the conservation plan, with the majority of them coming from
Nordland, the county where the drilling is taking place. The party struggled, despite the public's strong focus on the
green movement and
global warming. They failed to gather new voters and experienced one of their worst elections in years. The party's strong emphasis on
green politics, and its failure to capture new voters, has led to debate among electoral researchers.
Frank Aarebrot commented: "It is interesting that both the Socialist Left and the Liberals has this bad turnout, when the environmental conference is taking place in Copenhagen." Halvorsen felt the environmental policies of the second
Soria Moria declaration showed a clear level of commitment from the party's coalition partners.
Feminism The party has promoted itself as a
feminist party. In one of the Socialist Left's brochures published in 2005, it said, "The Socialist Left is a feminist party. We are fighting for a society where women and men have equal opportunities. This means that women should earn as much as men, that there must be more women in the top positions, and that there are welfare schemes that provide equality in the workplace." During the 2005 parliamentary election, one of the four main issues raised by party's youth wing was fighting against
sexual harassment. In January 2005,
Klassekampen asked 150 of the 169 representatives in parliament if they considered themselves feminist. According to the survey, the Socialist Left and the
Liberal Party were the two most feminist, while The
Progress Party was the least feminist party in parliament.
Audun Lysbakken was
Minister of Children and Equality from 2009 to 2012.
Arild Stokkan-Grande claimed equality amongst men and women has been a major issue in government mainly because of the activities of the Socialist Left. He claimed that there were more women than men serving in the departments the party controlled. As of 2013, the SV supported the 2008
Sex Purchase Law that criminalises purchasing sex and said in 2013 that it wanted to ban public
strip shows. In 2013 the party supported the
conscription to military services to also include
women, which was enacted into legislation in 2015.
Immigration and diversity In 1992,
Carl I. Hagen of the
Progress Party accused the party of supporting
free immigration to Norway, after
Lisbeth Holand proposed that immigrants from non-European countries should have the same immigration opportunities as immigrants who have their origins from countries that are members of the
European Economic Area. While Hagen was highly critical, she felt that the policy would offer housing and jobs for non-Europeans who needed them. An opinion poll showed that 82.9% of the Socialist Left members were open to more immigration, making the party the most immigration-friendly party in parliament, but still less than the non-parliamentary
Red Electoral Alliance. In a measurement done in late 2009, the Socialist Left became again the party least hostile to immigrants, this time behind the newly established party
Red. Another poll showed that almost one-third of Socialist Left voters would not want to live in an area with a high number of immigrants. Social geographer Karl Fredrik Tangen responded that it is easy for the typical intellectual Socialist Left voter, living in
upper class areas, to agree to what was for them hypothetical question. Recent surveys show that support for the party by immigrants plummeted from 25% in 2005 to 6% in 2009. Norwegian-
Somali writer
Amal Aden explained that "we do not earn anything from the policies of the Socialist Left. They say that everyone is okay, and that does not work". The party is open to more immigration, believing Norway will evolve into a more
multicultural society. The party believes the only way to create
social equality is to create ethnic equality in Norway. By 2009, Prime Minister
Jens Stoltenberg said his government would tighten the then prevailing immigration policy, which would make it harder for immigrants to be granted asylum in Norway. The Socialist Left, along with the Liberal Party and the
Christian Democrats, felt the new policy was too strict. and the party took a formal dissent in government regarding the asylum policy. The party in particular wants more liberal regulations for asylum cases that involve children. In 2012, the party leader Audun Lysbakken strongly warned against Islamist extremists like
Profetens Ummah, and vowed to fight them. The party is in favour of lifting the ban against religious headwear like
hijab and
turban for police employees, but has been split over the issue, and a substantial minority, including the youth fraction, voted against allowing religious headwear at the party's convention in 2013.
International affairs The military action in
Kosovo was a controversial issue within the party; the party leadership supported the military intervention, saying the
ethnic cleansing in Kosovo had to be stopped. Supporters included Kristin Halvorsen, who favored
NATO's air strikes, but a large group within the party vehemently opposed such support, arguing that violence would only lead to more violence. The party's chapter in
Akershus called the attack a "NATO-led terrorist bombing", and believed the bombing marked the first time that Norway had declared war on another nation. They wanted the
United Nations to find a peaceful solution to the conflict.
Stein Ørnhøi, leader of the
Socialist People's Party, said the party's representatives in parliament acted preposterously; he felt they made the wrong decision in supporting NATO's actions in Kosovo when the majority of the party was against it. During the
national convention, Halvorsen threatened to resign as party leader unless the factional fighting within the party stopped. This led to a split within the party, with the first group supporting her resignation and the larger second faction concluding that the NATO bombing was to be immediately terminated if the Serbs stopped the ethnic cleansing in Kosovo, if Halvorsen continued as party leader. (ISAF) troops in
Mazar-e-Sharif on 4 February 2009 In most foreign policy issues, the party has opposed military action. They were against the
U.S. invasion of Afghanistan and the
Iraq War. After joining the red–green coalition in 2005, the party stopped their strong opposition to the two wars, and in 2008 the party proposed creating a "new strategy" for the Norwegian armed forces located in Afghanistan. In 2007, Erik Solheim from the
Ministry of International Development visited Norwegian troops in Afghanistan. The policy regarding Afghanistan has led to much unrest within the party, most notably with the party's chapter in
Bergen. By early 2008, the party chapters of
Hordaland and
Rogaland criticised Kristin Halvorsen and the government regarding their Afghanistan policies, and demanded an immediate withdrawal by October 2009. The Oslo chapter asked for drastic changes in the military strategy created by NATO.
Thorbjørn Jagland, then
President of the Storting, requested the government should send more soldiers to Afghanistan, if NATO requested it. The Socialist Left supported the war, but was against sending more soldiers to the region, and denied access for the Norwegian Special Forces. Their main reason was that Norway, along with the
Netherlands, "clearly had the most soldiers located in Afghanistan", in relation to population in the respective countries, and Afghanistan was "the largest military commitment Norway currently has abroad".
Stance on the monarchy The Socialist Left Party is in favor of
the replacement of the monarchy with a republican form of government. It has consistently brought forward parliamentary legislation to abolish it. == Organisation and structure ==