Liberal People's Party (Norway)

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Liberal People's Party
Leader Vegard Martinsen
Founded 1992
Headquarters Oslo
Youth wing Liberalistisk Ungdom
Ideology Classical liberalism, Laissez-faire, Objectivism
Colours Purple
Website
www.stemdlf.no
Politics of Norway
Political parties
Elections
Campaign booth ahead of the 2009 election.

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The Liberal People's Party (Norwegian: Det Liberale Folkepartiet, DLF) is a classical liberal Norwegian political party created in 1992 by some of the members of the old Liberal People's Party.

History

During the 1990s, some of the Progress Party's members considered the party to have become less liberal than it had been in its earlier days. These members of the Progress Party then decided to join the DLF.[1] The DLF has since then taken increasingly more classical liberal viewpoints on most issues, emerging as a promoter of economic liberalism and laissez-faire capitalism. The party's politics states that the state should only protect individuals' rights through police, courts of law and a military service.

With meager showings in parliamentary elections, DLF's best result was achieved in the 2009 parliamentary election. Running in only three of 19 counties, they achieved a total of 350 votes – 0.013% of the national vote, or about 0.1% in each of the counties in which they ran (Oslo, Hedmark and Rogaland). In the 2011 local elections they received 247 votes in Oslo, a doubling in the number of votes from the last local election.

In 2014 Liberalistisk Ungdom seceded from the DLF and joined the Capitalist Party as their youth wing.[2]

Objectives

DLF wants to:[3]

  • Replace the parliamentary system and the monarchy with a constitutional republic.
  • Abolish coercive taxes.
  • Abolish all current restrictions regarding trade between Norway and other nations. Viewing the EU as a social democratic, redistributive and protectionist organization, they oppose Norwegian membership.
  • Simplify laws, end bureaucracy, decriminalize victimless crimes, and so forth.
  • Privatize roads, highways, railroads and other infrastructure, leaving their construction and upkeep to the free market.
  • Abolish state financing of: special interest groups, business and industry, the agricultural and fishing sectors, the unemployed, and so forth.
  • Abolish restrictions on immigration, provided that the above is accomplished beforehand.
  • Abolish mandatory military service, instead relying on a fully professional defence force.
  • Complete the separation of church and state.

Party leaders

References

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External links


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