Folkeaksjonen nei til mer bompenger

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Folkeaksjonen nei til mer bompenger The popular action
No to more tolls
Logo of the TSO
Party leader Frode Myrhol
founding 2014
Place of foundation Stavanger
Alignment Interest party
Parliament seats
0/169
( Storting , 2017 )
Website neitilmerbompenger.no

Folkeaksjonen nei til mer bompenger (abbreviation FNB; German ; The People's Action No to more tolls ) is a Norwegian party that was founded in 2014. It is often referred to as the Bompengepartiet (German: Mautpartei ). Their main concern is the reduction and elimination of tolls on Norwegian roads.

history

founding

The party was initially founded locally in the southwestern Norwegian city of Stavanger in 2014 in protest against a toll agreement that had been reached for the area around the city. The founder was Frode Myrhol , who had worked as a management consultant before joining Stavanger City Council.

In June 2018, the party managed to collect the 5,500 signatures required to be registered as a national party in the Norwegian party register.

Success in local and fylketing elections

The party competed in the Stavanger City Council election in autumn 2015. There they achieved three mandates.

For the local elections in September 2019, she made an electoral list in eleven municipalities . In Vestland , Rogaland , Vestfold og Telemark and Viken they also took part in the fylkesting elections . In some polls during the election campaign, the FNB achieved high scores. In Bergen , it achieved the highest polling values ​​of all parties for a while at over 20%.

In the 2019 federal elections, the party received at least one mandate in all provinces where it ran with a list. They achieved the best result in Vestland, where they got six seats in the Fylkesting with 9% of the vote . In Rogaland and Viken, 6.4% and 3.5% respectively, three members each moved into parliament.

They also achieved high results in the local elections: in Bergen they became the third largest parliamentary group in the city council with 16.7%. In the place where they were founded, Stavanger, they also became the third largest party and have now received six seats in the local parliament. In the newly founded municipality of Alver , it was the most elected party with 22.7% of the vote. After the election on September 9, 2019, the FNB also moved into the local parliaments of Askøy , Klepp , Oslo , Øygarden , Porsgrunn , Sandnes , Sola and Skien .

Positions

The party advocates that no further toll zones arise in Norway . In the long term, she wants to abolish existing tolls. Instead, the infrastructure should be financed through the state budget. In addition to the central transport issues for the party, the party also opposes a property tax . She also speaks out against the construction of wind turbines in the countryside.

In the 2019 local election campaign, the party was criticized several times for not taking clear positions apart from the toll issue.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Partiet - Folkeaksjonen Nei til mer bompenger. Retrieved August 15, 2019 (Norwegian Bokmål).
  2. "Om jeg skulle kjøpt forsikringer, ville jeg altså ikke kjøpt de av Kristjansson" Retrieved August 15, 2019 (Norwegian).
  3. Gunnar rings Johansen: Etablerer Nasjonalt bompengeparti. June 27, 2018, accessed August 15, 2019 (Bokmål in Norwegian).
  4. sammensetning Politisk | Stavanger commune. Retrieved August 15, 2019 (Norwegian).
  5. Valglister - Folkeaksjonen Nei til mer bompenger. Retrieved August 15, 2019 (Norwegian Bokmål).
  6. FNB størst i Bergen i ny måling Retrieved August 15, 2019 (Norwegian).
  7. Fylketingsvalg 2019. valgresultat.no, accessed on September 11, 2019 (Norwegian).
  8. Kommunestyrevalg 2019. valgresultat.no, accessed on September 11, 2019 (Norwegian).
  9. Leif Høybakk: Hva mener FNB? - Folkeaksjonen Nei til mer bompenger. Retrieved August 15, 2019 (Norwegian Bokmål).
  10. Disse vant (og tapte) partilederdebatten. Retrieved August 15, 2019 (Norwegian Bokmål).
  11. Kirsten Karlsen: Jonas advarer mot bompengepartier. May 22, 2019, accessed August 15, 2019 (Norwegian).