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POLITICS

What Erna Solberg’s seven election promises mean for foreign residents in Norway 

Norwegian PM Erna Solberg has made seven election pledges, but what will they mean for you if she stays on as prime minister? Here’s what you need to know. 

What Erna Solberg's seven election promises mean for foreign residents in Norway 
Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg has issued seven promises to voters. Photo: Olivier Hoslet/AFP

Conservative leader and current Prime Minister Erna Solberg has issued seven promises to voters as part of a four-year plan if she remains in government following Norway’s general election on September 13th. 

Among the promises are more private-sector jobs, shorter queues for healthcare and more affordable childcare. 

Below we’ll break down what they mean for you. If you’d like to look at the party’s election promises, you can do so here

READ ALSO: What you need to know about Norway’s upcoming election

Promise on schools

The first of the seven promises is aimed at education. Solberg has pledged that the Conservative Party will ensure that 5,000 more students complete high school. 

Just under 80 percent of students complete high school or equivalent apprenticeships, according to the latest numbers from Statistics Norway

For foreign residents with children nearing high school age, this will come as encouraging news. 

Norway is already one of the top ten most educated countries in the world, according to the World Population Review. So should your children wish to enter the international job market after studying in Norway, they should be in good stead. 

The drawback to this, presumably, would be more competition for university spots if they are thinking about higher education. In recent years Norway has seen record numbers of people applying to universities in Norway. More than 154,000 people applied to university in Norway this year, and Solberg’s promise will only see this increase if it comes to fruition. 

More private sector jobs 

Solberg has also pledged to increase the number of private sector jobs in Norway.

She has said she would work towards four out of five jobs in Norway being created by the private sector. 

Most foreign residents working in Norway are employed in the private sector, so job creation in this sphere will come as welcome news if Solberg can make good on the promise. 

One of the strategies the Conservatives will employ to ensure more jobs in the private sector are created is to scrap a wealth tax on working capital and launch an entrepreneurial package that aims to make starting a business in Norway easier. 

READ MORE: What you need to know about setting up as a freelancer in Norway

Shorter waiting times for healthcare

Solberg has said that the Conservatives will aim to reduce waiting times by around two weeks over the next four years. 

She also defended the privatisation of healthcare in Norway and said that the Conservatives would set the goal of offering 100,000 patients free choice of treatment by 2025. 

Norway’s healthcare systems will also become increasingly digitised as part of the crackdown on waiting times. This may make it harder for new residents to settle and access healthcare. In most cases, a Norwegian national identity number and or a level four security electronic ID that requires an identity number to log in will be required to sign in to digital public services such as healthcare. 

READ ALSO: Everything foreigners in Norway need to know about electronic IDs

Greater equality and social diversity

The Conservatives have also set several goals and proposed various strategies under this promise that could affect the lives of foreign residents. 

Firstly, they will ensure that more children are offered daycare spaces when they turn one and abolish the parental payment for families with three children in the same kindergarten. This is in addition to raising the child benefit by 8,200 kroner for children up to six. You can read about the child benefit here.

Secondly, they will aim to ensure that three out of four refugees will be in work or education one year after completing the introduction programme. 

They will also try to improve the standard of Norwegian language teaching by introducing testing and assessments for providers. 

On the topic of language, they will also raise the competence requirement for Norwegian in citizenship applications. 

READ ALSO: What you need to know about Norway’s citizenship test

For potential homeowners, Solberg will also look to expand the rent to own scheme. 

READ MORE: Is it better to buy or rent property in Norway 

The Conservatives will try and simplify the Norwegian Labour and Welfare Administration’s (NAV) services for job seekers.

Climate promise

In its four-year plan, the Conservatives describe climate change as the biggest problem the world faces. 

By 2025, Solberg wants all new cars and vans sold in Norway to be emission-free and have said that the CO2 tax will be stepped up to 2,000 kroner per tonne in 2030. 

This means anyone planning on buying a car should bear this in mind when thinking about their purchase. 

Furthermore, Solberg has said that if she stays on as PM, the Conservatives would also create more jobs in the green sector. 

Freedom to live where you want

This doesn’t apply to immigration, which the Conservatives have pledged to take a measured and controlled approach to. This instead applies to having the infrastructure available to live and work in Norway, whether you choose. 

The party has pledged to offer high-quality education in more rural areas and making sure all houses have access to both high-speed broadband and 5G coverage by 2025. 

The party didn’t make any specific pledges regarding the opportunity to work from home or how they will give those living in rural areas greater access to private-sector jobs.

Better policing and security

Norway will focus strongly on tackling online hate crime, trolling and abuse under another Solberg government and will work on improving policing in rural areas. 

They will aim to increase recruitment for the police in rural areas twice as much as in cities. 

Norwegian police will also aim to increase victim aftercare.  

What have critics said? 

Labour deputy leader Hadia Tajik has called the promises “anaemic”. 

“There are quite empty promises after eight years of Conservative politics. I think people see through this. We see the results after eight years in government,” Tajik told newspaper VG.

Centre Party leader Trygve Slagsvold Vedum has also hit out at the promises. 

“These are small ideas and centralising solutions,” he told VG. 

He also said that Solberg had failed to do enough to create private, green jobs. 

Labour leader and Solberg’s biggest rival in the election, Jonas Gahr Støre, has said the promises would only benefit the rich and privileged. 

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POLITICS

‘It’s time to reset Britain’s relations with Europe’

As he begins his first overseas trip, the UK's new Foreign Secretary David Lammy tells The Local how Britain plans to rebuild ties with Europe and become a better neighbour.

'It’s time to reset Britain's relations with Europe'

I am a man of multiple identities. Londoner. English. Patriotic Brit. Proud of my Caribbean heritage. A transatlanticist. And, throughout my political career, absolutely committed to a close partnership with our European neighbours. 

As the new British Foreign Secretary, with our Prime Minister Keir Starmer, this government will reset relations with Europe as a reliable partner, a dependable ally and a good neighbour. 

That is why I am travelling immediately to some of our key European partners. Sitting down with Germany’s Annalena Baerbock, Poland’s Radek Sikorski and Sweden’s Tobias Billström, my message will be simple: let us seize the opportunity for a reset, working even more closely together to tackle shared challenges. 

The most immediate of these challenges, of course, is Ukraine. We will stand by the brave people of Ukraine, as they defend their freedom against Vladimir Putin’s new form of fascism.

British military, economic, political and diplomatic support for Ukraine will remain ironclad. But we are always stronger when we work with others. Germany, Poland and Sweden are all also staunch supporters of Ukraine. European security will be this government’s foreign and defence priority.

Russia’s barbaric invasion has made clear the need for us to do more to strengthen our own defences.

Next week, the Prime Minister, the Defence Secretary and I will all travel to Washington for the NATO Summit. 75 years ago, my political hero and former Labour Foreign Secretary, Ernest Bevin, was pivotal to forming the Alliance. He would have been delighted to see NATO grow larger over the years, with Germany, Poland and now Sweden all joining the most successful defensive alliance in history. 

This Government’s commitment to the Alliance is unshakeable, just as it was in Bevin’s time. I will be discussing this weekend how NATO allies can go further in investing in our tightly connected defence industries and providing Ukraine with its own clear path to joining our alliance. 

Alongside security, we want to do more together to bring prosperity to our continent. None of us can address the urgency of the climate emergency alone – we need coordinated global action. This is particularly important in Europe, whose energy networks are so closely connected – together, we must invest in the industries of the future and deliver sustained economic growth for all.

And finally, we must do more to champion the ties between our people and our culture. Holidays, family ties, school and student exchanges, the arts, and sport (I was of course cheering on England in the Euros…). Thanks to this, our citizens benefit from the rich diversity of our continent. 

We can deliver more cooperation in many areas bilaterally, via NATO and in groupings like the G7, the Joint Expeditionary Force or the European Political Community which will gather at Blenheim Palace on July 18th. 

But if we are to fulfil our ambitions for a reset, we must also improve Britain’s relationship with the European Union.

I will be explaining to my new fellow Foreign Ministers how our new Government’s proposal for an ambitious and broad-ranging UK-EU Security Pact would underpin closer cooperation between us, enshrining a new geopolitical partnership. I also look forward to hearing their ideas for how we can rebuild trust and reset the relationship between the UK and the EU. 

Over centuries, our individual and national stories have come together to tell a wider story of shared progress. Today, we all share a commitment to democracy, human rights and international law. Tragic experiences in our continent’s shared past have helped us to understand how our shared security and prosperity depend on these shared values.

And I believe these values also offer a foundation for closer partnership in the future. My visit this weekend is just the beginning. I look forward to seeing Britain reconnect with our European neighbours in the years ahead.

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