Haugesunds Social-Demokrat was a Norwegian newspaper, published in Haugesund in Rogaland county. It was affiliated with the Social Democratic Labour Party of Norway.
Haugesunds Social-Demokrat was started in 1921, the same year the Social Democratic Labour Party broke away from the Norwegian Labour Party. In 1926, Haugesunds Social-Demokrat was incorporated into the Labour Party newspaper Haugesunds Arbeiderblad . [1] In 1927, the Social Democratic Labour Party reconciled with the Labour Party, and the two parties again became one.
Bergensavisen, usually shortened to BA, is the second largest newspaper in Bergen, Norway. It has its headquarters in Bergen and is published in tabloid format. The newspaper webpage ba.no is Bergen's largest local newspaper webpage.
Telemarksavisa is a Norwegian newspaper, published in Skien in Telemark county.
Haugaland Arbeiderblad was a Norwegian newspaper, published in Haugesund in Rogaland county. It was affiliated with the Norwegian Labour Party.
Ny Tid was a Norwegian newspaper established in 1899 by the typographers Joh. Halseth and Alf Scheflo at the same time as they established their own printing office in Trondheim. The publishers meant to create a worker's newspaper, not a socialist paper. When the first issue came out on 20 September, the newspaper was an organ of the Liberal Party of Norway, but the paper quickly became socialist and thus an organ of the labour movement and later the Norwegian Labour Party in Trondheim when the labour movement took over the paper in July 1900. The paper was first released weekly, but from 1902 on it was released daily.
The Labour Party is a political party in Indonesia. It has its origins in the Indonesian Prosperous Laborers organization (SBSI), which in 1993 threw its support behind the Indonesian Democratic Party (PDI) as a vehicle for its political aspirations. When the PDI split in 1996, it allied itself with the breakaway faction led by Megawati Sukarnoputri, which led to it coming under pressure from the New Order government of President Suharto. On 30 July 1996, SBSI chairman Muchtar Pakpahan was detained on subversion charges. Following the fall of Suharto in 1998, the SBSI became disillusions with Megawati's now renamed Indonesian Democratic Party – Struggle and decided to establish its own party, the National Labour Party. After the failure in 1999 election, the party changed its name to Social Democrat Labour Party. The party stood in the 2004 Indonesian legislative election, but won only 0.6 percent of the vote and no legislative seats. Party chairman However, the party has 12 representatives in provincial assemblies. The party subsequently changed its name to the Labour Party.
Martin Julius Halvorsen was a Norwegian newspaper editor and politician for the Labour and Social Democratic Labour parties.
Solungen was a Norwegian newspaper, published in Åsnes in Hedmark county.
Demokraten is a local newspaper in Fredrikstad, Norway. Second in its city behind Fredriksstad Blad, it is published three days a week. The chief editor is Tomm Pentz Pedersen.
Olav Kringen was a Norwegian newspaper editor.
Gunnar Ousland was a Norwegian editor, writer, trade unionist and politician for the Labour and Social Democratic Labour parties. He started out as a temperance activist and trade unionist before serving as a politician and in the party press. He edited several magazines and newspapers, including an illegal newspaper during World War II. He was later one of the proponents for the Common Program, and wrote historical books.
Anders Johnsen Buen was a Norwegian typographer, newspaper editor, trade unionist and politician. He belonged to the Norwegian Labour Party from the start, being party secretary as well as editor of the party organs Social-Demokraten and Ny Tid, but politically he was described as a "reformist pragmatic", and was thus a member of the breakaway Social Democratic Labour Party of Norway from 1921 to 1927.
Knut Olai Thornæs was a Norwegian newspaper editor and politician. He was a member of the Labour Party from 1900, and represented the party politically, but joined the Communist Party upon the split in 1923. Thornæs was the editor-in-chief of several newspapers, most notably Ny Tid.
Gudbrandsdalens Arbeiderblad was a Norwegian newspaper published in Lillehammer in Hedmark county, Norway; from 1919 to 1923 it was named Gudbrandsdalens Social-Demokrat.
Paul Olsen Løkke was a Norwegian newspaper editor and politician for the Labour and Social Democratic Labour parties.
Oscar Adolf Pedersen was a Norwegian newspaper editor and politician for the Labour and Social Democratic Labour Labour parties.
Fritt Folk was a Norwegian newspaper, published in Høyanger in Sogn og Fjordane county.
Østerdalens Arbeiderblad was a Norwegian newspaper, published in Elverum in Hedmark county. It was named Østerdalens Social-Demokrat from 1915 to 1919 and Hedmark Fylkes Arbeiderblad from 1923 to 1925.
Østfold Arbeiderblad was a newspaper published in Sarpsborg in Østfold county, Norway.
Hans Andreas Hanssen was a Norwegian newspaper editor and politician for the Labour Party. He served two terms as an MP, and edited the newspapers Smaalenenes Social-Demokrat, Nybrott, 1ste Mai and Folket. Hanssen was a temperance activist in the years before World War II, and then joined Nasjonal Samling and worked as a priest.
Bergens Social-Demokrat was a Norwegian newspaper, published in Bergen.