Vidar Kleppe

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Vidar Kleppe (born September 16, 1963 in Bergen) is a Norwegian politician. He is a former member of the Progress Party and current leader of the Democrats.

[edit] Biography

Kleppe used to be a prominent Progress Party politician, being a member of their national board from 1989 to 1999. He was a member of the Norwegian parliament (Stortinget) for two periods (1989-1993 and 1997-2001). In 2001, Kleppe was suspended from the Progress Party, in spite of strong opposition to this move in Vestfold's chapter of the party [1], and many of them went on to form Demokratene (the Democrats). The supension was a restricted to a year only, but Kleppe chose to leave the party and ran in the 2001 Storting election as a candidate for Sørlandslista (Southern List), but unsuccessfully, receiving only 2.8% of the vote. He then went on to found Demokratene in 2002 and became the new party's leader. He currently serves as both a member of Vest-Agder county parliament and Kristiansand Kommunestyre (Kristiansand City Council). He has twice (2001 and 2005) campaigned unsuccessfully for a place in Stortinget.[2]

Kleppe has a firm stance against immigration, and this position has led to criticism of Kleppe and his party in the editorial of the Newspaper Telemarksavisa.[3]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Mange reagerer på suspenderingen (Many reactions to the suspension, NRK Østafjells, March 8, 2001)
  2. ^ VG Nett page about Demokratene for the 2005 election. (Norwegian)
  3. ^ Demokratiske Demokrater? (Democratic Democrats?) Editorial, Telemarksavisa, October 19 2005 (Norwegian)