Socialist Left Party
Socialist Left Party Sosialistisk Venstreparti | |
|---|---|
| Abbreviation | SV |
| Leader | Kirsti Bergstø |
| Parliamentary leader | Audun Lysbakken |
| Founded | 16 March 1975 |
| Preceded by | Socialist Electoral League |
| Headquarters | Møllergata 4, Oslo |
| Youth wing | Socialist Youth |
| Membership (2024) | 16,240 |
| Ideology | Euroscepticism |
| Political position | Left-wing |
| European affiliation | European Left Alliance (observer) |
| Nordic affiliation | Nordic Green Left Alliance |
| Colours |
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| Slogan | For de mange – ikke for de få ('For the many – not the few') |
| Storting | 9 / 169 |
| County Councils | 34 / 574 |
| County Mayors | 0 / 15 |
| Municipal Councils | 484 / 9,344 |
| Municipal Mayors | 5 / 357 |
| Sami Parliament | 0 / 39 |
| Website | |
| sv | |
The Socialist Left Party (Norwegian: Sosialistisk Venstreparti, SV; Northern Sami: Sosialisttalaš Gurutbellodat) is a socialist political party in Norway. Positioned on the left-wing of the political spectrum, it is opposed to European Union and the European Economic Area membership. SV supports a strong public sector, stronger social welfare programs, environmentalism, and republicanism. As of 2024, the party had 16,240 members. The party leader is Kirsti Bergstø, who was elected on 18 March 2023.
The party was founded in 1973 as the Socialist Electoral League, an electoral coalition with the Communist Party of Norway, Socialist People's Party, Democratic Socialists – AIK, and independent socialists. In 1975, the coalition was turned into a unified political party. The party was largely founded as a result of the foreign policies prevalent at the time, with the socialists being opposed to Norwegian membership of the European Communities (which later became the European Union) and of NATO.
In the 2005 Norwegian parliamentary election, SV became a governing party for the first time, participating in the red–green coalition with the Labour Party and the Centre Party; before that, it was frequently turned down by the Labour Party. SV was reduced to the seventh-largest party following the 2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, in its worst election on record, but bounced back in the 2017 and 2021 parliamentary elections, although it remained in the opposition both times.