Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Progress Party (Norway)" in English language version.
Fremskrittspartiet ønsker et samarbeide med Høyre. Liberalismen er blitt partiets ideologi. Dette er to sentrale hovedkonklusjoner fra partiets landsmøte i Sandefjord, som blr [sic] avsluttet søndag.
Her conservative coalition with the anti-immigration Progress Party ran a campaign promising tax cuts, which it said would help to boost economic growth.
... of the populist right-wing libertarian party Framskrittspartiet (The Progress Party).
The far-right Progress Party (FrP) in Norway has been a part of three governing coalitions: as a support party for the coalition led by the Christian People's Party (KF), formed after the 2001 elections, which also included the Conservatives (Høyre) and the Liberals (V), and twice as a formal coalition partner of Høyre, following the 2013 and 2017 elections.
FrP vil: Nedlegge Sametinget som politisk organ og gjenopprette samerådet som rådgivende organ til Stortinget. Frem til dette skjer vil FrP arbeide for at Sametinget skal være et ikke-etnisk betinget organ.
The Progress Party (Fremskrittspartiet, FRP) is a far-right anti-Muslim political party in Norway
Norway's anti-immigration Progress Party ...
However, as expected, the anti-immigration Progress Party, Fremskrittspartiet (FrP), has since demanded stricter control of borders, migrants and migrant labour due to the possibility of what it called 'import infection'.
The far-right Progress Party (FrP) in Norway has been a part of three governing coalitions: as a support party for the coalition led by the Christian People's Party (KF), formed after the 2001 elections, which also included the Conservatives (Høyre) and the Liberals (V), and twice as a formal coalition partner of Høyre, following the 2013 and 2017 elections.
By any objective standard, the Progress Party is among the most successful right-wing populist parties in Europe ...
Knut Heidar, politics professor at the University of Oslo, said that the comparison with the National Front and other European parties was problematic: "It's a result of crude categorisation. You put them all in the same bag and think they're all alike. But the Progress Party is more moderate on nearly all points. This is why it's not as controversial in Norway as it is in foreign media." [...] "They're really more like the Norwegian or British Conservative parties than they are like the Austrian Freedom Party, the Vlaams Bloc or the National Front," he added.
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)The far-right Progress Party (FrP) in Norway has been a part of three governing coalitions: as a support party for the coalition led by the Christian People's Party (KF), formed after the 2001 elections, which also included the Conservatives (Høyre) and the Liberals (V), and twice as a formal coalition partner of Høyre, following the 2013 and 2017 elections.