– There is no doubt that I am disappointed today, says LO leader Peggy Hessen Følsvik to news on Tuesday. – This election has been an uphill battle from start to finish, she adds. She believes the left never found the form they hoped for. – Now both I and the Labor Party must ensure a proper election evaluation of all stages. – Must train more – It is clear that this is a bad choice, and one has to ask oneself why it is going so badly, says Ap veteran Thorbjørn Berntsen. He believes the party must now scrutinize itself and look at how the party has presented itself. – Special ticket for the younger voters. It is the TikTok generation that we must concentrate on, he says. He is worried about the right-wing wave that has swept across the country. – What I am most afraid of around the election is the privatization policy of the right. They will call the welfare society, they will pick from each other. It will take a long time to build up again. The AP veteran wonders why the Labor Party gets such poor support. Photo: news The Labor Party veteran believes Jonas Gahr Støre is the best prime minister Norway can have now and wonders why the Labor Party has such poor support. Both the policy and Jonas Gahr Støre’s position as party leader must be discussed at the next national meeting, he says. – It is a fact that the party has had increasingly poor support while he has been leader. – In football parlance, they use the expression that the coach has lost the dressing room. The question is whether Jonas has lost his wardrobe. In any case, it is certain that I have to train more, he adds. The president of the Storting: – A miserable result Masud Gharahkhani (Ap) wrote a post on Facebook on Tuesday morning in which he describes the election result. – We have to admit that this election is a miserable election result for Social Democracy, he writes. He believes the result is a clear message from the voters and that the party must take the feedback to heart. – People are not satisfied with us. They expect more from us. They are disappointed. We have to understand the seriousness and the feedback to be able to do something, he writes. – A serious signal – A serious signal, former Ap deputy leader Trond Giske said when the election results were clear. The Labor Party is no longer the largest party in Norway at an election. And Giske was not alone in being dissatisfied. Both the leader of the Union and the leader of the Trade Union were not satisfied with the result. – It hurts, you know that, said Større about the election results from the lectern on election day for Ap. At the same time, Ap leader and Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre said that others must consider whether the election defeat is his fault. – Not good enough Party secretary in Ap, Kjersti Stenseng, tells news’s Valmorgon on Tuesday that the election result is in no way good enough. – I have a responsibility, and I have a joint responsibility for the whole team. Now we will use the time in the future to evaluate each individual municipality and county, she says. – We have to learn lessons from this election here, see how we can lift ourselves up and both get a better election result, but also get back the title as the country’s largest party at the next crossroads, adds Stenseng. Raymond Johansen congratulates the bourgeois party on the election and says he is ready to resign. Photo: Ismail Burak Akkan / news The negotiations are still going on, but it seems that the largest municipalities in the country are changing color from red to blue. In the capital, the blue bloc has received 31 out of 59 mandates and a narrow majority. Raymond Johansen acknowledges the loss and says he is ready to retire. – It’s just to congratulate the civic doctors with a waltziger, he says to news on Tuesday. Also the leader of the city council in Bergen, Rune Bakervik (Ap), tells news that the current city council with the Labor Party and Venstre will resign. Support throughout the country
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