Sylvi Listhaug

Sylvi Listhaug
First Deputy Leader of the Progress Party
Assumed office
3 September 2018
Acting: 13 August 3 September 2018
Leader Siv Jensen
Preceded by Per Sandberg
Minister of Justice, Public Security and Immigration
In office
17 January 2018  20 March 2018
Prime Minister Erna Solberg
Preceded by Per-Willy Amundsen
Succeeded by Tor Mikkel Wara
Minister of Immigration and Integration
In office
16 December 2015  17 January 2018
Prime Minister Erna Solberg
Preceded by Office created
Succeeded by Herself as Minister of Justice, Public Security and Immigration
Minister of Agriculture and Food
In office
16 October 2013  16 December 2015
Prime Minister Erna Solberg
Preceded by Trygve Slagsvold Vedum
Succeeded by Jon Georg Dale
Oslo City Commissioner of Welfare and Social Services
In office
18 January 2006  27 September 2011
Preceded by Margaret Eckbo
Succeeded by Anniken Hauglie
Member of the Norwegian Parliament
Assumed office
11 September 2017
Constituency Møre og Romsdal
Personal details
Born (1977-12-25) 25 December 1977
Ørskog, Møre og Romsdal, Norway
Nationality Norwegian
Political party Progress Party
Spouse(s) Espen Espeset
Children 3
Alma mater Volda University College

Sylvi Listhaug (born 25 December 1977) is a Norwegian politician and parliamentarian for the Progress Party. She was constituted as First Deputy Leader of the Progress Party in September 2018. Listhaug served as Norway's first Minister of Immigration and Integration from 2015 to 2018, a specially created cabinet position during the European migrant crisis, and Minister of Agriculture and Food from 2013 to 2015. She served as Minister of Justice, Public Security and Immigration from January 2018 until her resignation in March 2018, after which she moved on to the Storting following her election as a parliamentary representative in 2017. Originally from the rural municipality of Ørskog in Sunnmøre, she began her political career in Oslo as City Commissioner of Welfare and Social Services.

As Minister of Migration and Integration, Listhaug reduced the number of asylum seekers arriving in Norway from 30,000 in 2015 to 2,000 in 2017.[1] Although the drop in asylum seekers was partially linked to an overfall fall in traffic to Europe, Listhaug was attributed for proposing and securing support for many new regulations and overseeing the tightening of the system, which resulted in a 19-year low in number of new asylum arrivals.[2]

She is a current parliamentarian and member of the parliament’s Standing Committee on Health and Care Services.[3] Listhaug has been called a “rising star” in the Progress Party by The Washington Post,[4] The Guardian,[5] Aftenposten,[6] Verdens Gang,[7] and others. She has been mentioned by long-time party chairman Carl I. Hagen as a candidate to succeed Siv Jensen as party leader.[8][9][10]

Early life and education

Listhaug was born in Ålesund.[11] She was raised on the family farm in Ørskog, Møre og Romsdal, to which she has odelsrett.[12] Her father worked with transportation, while her mother ran the family farm. She has two twin siblings.[13]

In 1995 Listhaug began to work as a care assistant at the Ørskog home for the elderly, and from 1996 to 2000 she studied history, social sciences, and special education at the Volda University College, and continued to work at the Ørskog home to support herself during her student years. In 2000 she graduated and qualified as a teacher, and from 2000 to 2001 she worked as a teacher at the Sjøholt school in Ørskog.[14]

Political career

Early career and parliament

Listhaug began her political involvement locally in Ørskog.[15] She has held several positions within the Progress Party and its youth organisation Progress Party's Youth since 1998, and has been a member of the Progress Party central board since 2005.[11] She worked as political advisor and aide to the Progress Party's parliamentary group from 2001 to 2004.[11] In 2005 she had a stay abroad as an intern in the United States House of Representatives.[14] She has been a deputy representative in the Norwegian parliament from Møre og Romsdal (2001 to 2009), and from Oslo (2009 to 2013), with a total 95 days of parliamentary session served. She was elected as a parliamentary representative for the first time in 2017 (from Møre og Romsdal).[16]

Oslo city commissioner

Listhaug in 2009

Listhaug was appointed city commissioner (byråd) of welfare and social services in the city government of Oslo in 2006, having been secretary to the previous commissioner Margaret Eckbo. Listhaug spearheaded a number of reforms as commissioner, introducing free choice in home care, and reintroducing senior homes in her first year. She stated as her goals more competition and better nursing homes, and opening for more private companies.[17]

In 2009 she became the subject of a nursing home funding scandal, after it was revealed that a company that had been granted a total amount of 23,5 million NOK from Oslo municipality to build nursing homes for Norwegians in Altea, Spain had not yet even been granted a Spanish construction permit.[18][19] Listhaug claimed she was not responsible for the plans, which were designed to make Oslo a prime example for other municipalities in regards to care for the elderly.[20][21] Listhaug told reporters from the state broadcaster NRK in March 2010 that she did “not have the responsibility for the construction of the nursing home nor authoring the contracts.”[22]

Other proposals by Listhaug as city commissioner included a stricter policy on psychiatric patients,[23] and putting up posters of convicted rapists in their local community.[24] Before the gay parade in Oslo in 2009, Listhaug suggested to some controversy that "half and almost wholly naked people dancing around in the streets of Oslo" could rather lead to less tolerance of homosexuals, thus working against its goal, although she made clear that homosexuals should be able to party "when and where they want".[25]

Political consultant

From 2012 until her cabinet appointment, Listhaug had worked as a senior consultant with First House,[14] a Norwegian strategic advisory, corporate communications, governmental affairs and crisis management/issue management agency. Shortly after her appointment, media attention centered on her decision to keep secret her list of clients during her time in the job.[11] The list of public clients was made public in early 2014 after Listhaug herself declared a personal conflict of interest.[26]

Minister of Agriculture (2013-2015)

On 16 October 2013 Listhaug was appointed Minister of Agriculture and Food in the new Solberg Cabinet.[27][14] The Solberg government signalled a drastic change of course in Norwegian agricultural policy by opening for more freely sale and purchase of farms, and seeking a development towards more sustainable fewer and bigger farms.[11] Listhaug as Minister of Agriculture sought to remove laws which require farm-owners to live on the farm. Listhaug argued her changes would lead to a more efficient food production in Norway, ultimately reducing high food prices. She also lowered government subsidies to farmers, who receive one of the highest government subsidies in the world, according to the OECD.[28][29] As an example, Norwegian farmers receive over 50% of their farm income as government support, while the equivalent number for U.S. farmers is 8%.[30][31]

As Listhaug in 2010 had called the Norwegian agricultural policy a "communist system" in an op-ed, this received widespread attention in media and social media.[32] After being pressured with the comment in a television debate, she stated her intent on following the new government's policy agreement.[33] Prior comments by Listhaug and the new government's course was met with scepticism and protest among some farmers.[11]

During her time as Minister of Agriculture and Food, Listhaug had, somewhat controversially, contacts with clients of First House, including the farmers’ organization Norges Bondelaget, the NHO employers’ organization unit representing food and beverage firm, the brewing organization Bryggeriforeningen, and supermarket chain Rema 1000, one of her last clients for First House before she joined the government herself.[34]

Minister of Immigration (2015-2017)

On 16 December 2015 Listhaug was appointed Minister of Immigration and Integration, a newly formed cabinet position under the Ministry of Justice and Public Security, amid the European migrant crisis and record-high numbers of asylum seekers in Norway that resulted in a broad parliamentary agreement to tighten asylum regulations.[35][36] The month prior to her appointment Listhaug criticised what she described as a "tyranny of goodness" haunting the Norwegian immigration debate, and that it would be more Christian and reasonable to help as many people as possible through foreign aid to refugees abroad rather than aiding fewer and more costly asylum seekers in Norway.[36][37] She later vowed that her proposed asylum regulations would make Norway's asylum policies "one of the strictest in Europe".[38]

The first four months of 2016 saw asylum applications in Norway drop to its lowest levels since 1993, with only about 250 new applications each month.[39][40] The reduction resulted in at least kr 800 million (US$100 million) being saved in direct asylum reception costs alone in the revised annual state budget, amid budget strains due to the low oil price.[41] Listhaug has since called for further immigration and asylum restrictions to be implemented, particularly in family reunifications which reached all-time highs of about 20,000 in 2017.[42][43] Among her proposals is that family reunifications should rather be achieved in the native countries of immigrants instead of in Norway.[44]

Opinion polls consistently showed Listhaug to have the highest approval rating of all government ministers from her party, and several others.[45] In September 2016, a poll showed that 59% of Norway's population approved of her work on immigration, with less than a quarter disapproving.[46]

In August 2017, a row took place between Listhaug and Sweden's political establishment after Listhaug planned a visit to the Swedish suburb of Rinkeby in the context of the country's vulnerable areas, sometimes dubbed "no-go zones", having warned during her time as minister about the need to avoid "Swedish conditions" in Norway. Although meeting with other Swedish officials, Sweden's Minister for Migration Heléne Fritzon cancelled her scheduled meeting with Listhaug, saying she would not be part of an "election campaign" in the run-up to the Norwegian parliamentary election in September.[47][48][49]

Minister of Justice (2017-2018)

Sylvi Listhaug and the Solberg Cabinet presented after change of ministers.

After securing renewed support for the centre-right coalition in the 2017 parliamentary election, Listhaug was appointed Minister of Justice, Public Security and Immigration in January 2018, absorbing her former cabinet position following a government re-shuffle.[50] As Minister of Justice, Listhaug “waged a war” against pedophile perpetrators, both internationally and domestically. Listhaug introduced new legislation which would remove the passports from pedophiles committing assaults abroad, and it caused controversy when she unapologetically referred to these individuals as “monsters.”[51][52][53]

In March 2018 Listhaug posted a Facebook message claiming that the Labour Party "cares more about the rights of terrorists than national security" following disagreement on a parliamentary vote about whether the state should be able to withdraw the citizenship of threats to national security. After insisting for several days amid criticism that no apology was warranted other than stating regret if offending anyone, the government led by Prime Minister Solberg, and eventually Listhaug herself apologised for the post in parliament. As Listhaug's initial apology was considered "not good enough" by Labour leader Jonas Gahr Støre, this caused the opposition, including Labour and the Centre Party to state their support for a motion of no confidence pushed by the Red Party. The day before the vote on 20 March, the Christian Democrats also concluded they would support the motion, thereby indicating a parliamentary majority for the motion of no confidence.[54][55][56][57] While retaining the full support of the Prime Minister who was prepared to put the whole cabinet up for a vote of confidence as a last resort, Listhaug resigned herself in the morning before the parliamentary session.[58][59]

After eight years of decreasing membership numbers, the Progress Party received 5,350 new members, making up 25 percent of the party's total membership following the conflict.[60][61] One opinion poll also briefly showed a doubling of voter support for the party.[62] The new party members were seen by political scientists to make up a new power-base for Listhaug within the party.[63]

First deputy leader

In June 2018, Sylvi Listhaug was nominated by Møre and Romsdal Progress Party as a candidate for first deputy leader of the Progress Party. The party's annual national meeting will constitute a new deputy leader on September 3, 2018, in order to replace Per Sandberg. State broadcaster NRK reported in August 2018 that Listhaug likely will be elected by the central board.[64] Listhaug told reporters in Arendal: "I am humbled and honored to be mentioned as a deputy leader candidate", and added “I am ready to serve if the party wants me in such a role."[65][66]

On September 3, 2018, the Progress Party’s Central Board unanimously voted to constitute Listhaug as acting first deputy leader of the party. The formal election will take place during the party’s national convention in May 2019.[67]

Political views

Listhaug believes that the elderly should have legal rights to a place in private nursing homes paid by public funding. She has advocated "zero tolerance" on crime, more visible police, and said that integration has to become better by having stricter demands on people who move to Norway, combined with a more restrictive immigration policy.[68]

Although a lifelong Christian, Listhaug has considered leaving the Church of Norway which she has described as "thoroughly socialist",[36] due to the former Red-Green government's interventionist policy on appointment of bishops, as well as church leaders in her view voicing political opinions on too many issues. Favoring a separation of church and state, she has pointed to it "working well" in the United States.[69] She has been a repeat guest on the Christian television channel Visjon Norge.[70]

Listhaug is in favor of immigrant repatriation from Norway. She has advocated voluntary return, in her role as Integration Minister, for rejected asylum seekers and other migrants.[71] She has stated that Norway needed to "entice more [people] to voluntarily travel back" to their homelands,[72] claiming it was "better for us to encourage them to travel back", rather than face deportation and would ultimately save Norway money.[73] During her government tenure, record numbers of illegal immigrants were simultaneously deported from Norway.[74] Listhaug has stated her position that "I think those who come to Norway need to adapt to our society. Here we eat pork, drink alcohol and show our face. You must abide by the values, laws and regulations that are in Norway when you come here."[75] Her proposals includes calling for a ban on the hijab in elementary schools.[76]

Listhaug is a proponent of banning full-face veils and hijabs in elementary schools, arguing that “we need to fight the culture of social control and controlling women.”[77] She is a proponent of barring hate preachers from entering Norway.[78][79]

Migration policy

She is noted for her hard-line immigration policy.[80] As Minister of Migration and Integration, Listhaug presented a 150-page document with 40 proposals for new asylum- and migration regulations, in which she claimed would make Norway’s migrant policy “one of the strictest in Europe.” The proposals, which failed to summon necessary parliamentary support in June 2016, included proposals such as:[81]

  • More efficient ID clarification procedures;
  • Simplifying the process for the refusal of asylum applications;
  • Introducing temporary protection until age 18 for unaccompanied minors;
  • Greater opportunity for deporting persons whose applications proved to be unfounded;
  • Stricter integration criteria for permanent residency;
  • Tighter restrictions on right to family reunification.

The proposal also included procedures which would allow detaining migrants who submit “obviously groundless asylum claims” for up to 72 hours, in order to prevent them from evading deportation. Speaking to state broadcaster NRK, Sylvi Listhaug said: “We can see that unfounded asylum seekers disappear while the police are processing their applications. This will prohibit them from running off and eventually getting involved in criminal activity. Now we will know where we have them, get their applications processed and then return them.” Minister Listhaug added that 90 out of 537 asylum seekers processed under the 48-hour procedure in 2015 disappeared, and that the locations of ninety percent of those still remain unknown to authorities.[82][83] The proposals also would expand the ability of law enforcement agencies to store and acquire biometric information such as fingerprints, in order to determine whether an asylum applicant may present a security threat.[84]

In Listhaug’s response to the parliament’s rejection of her proposals for stricter migration policies, she stated: “This is primarily a shame for the Norwegian nation. We need a sustainable policy that safeguards the Norwegian welfare model. The level of immigration to Norway will be a decisive factor in this.” Shortly after, Sylvi Listhaug traveled to Canada in order to learn more about the Canadian private sponsorship program for refugees.[85]

Speaking to reporters from Ynet in 2017, Listhaug told reporters that she believes fewer illegal immigrants are coming to Norway due to the fact that Norway deports undocumented migrants back to their country of origin.[86] As immigration minister, Listhaug went on a trip visiting three countries in East Africa with the goal of implementing new return agreements. In advance of the trip, Listhaug told reporters: “Return policy is highly prioritized in Norway, so it will be natural for us to ensure that people who are not entitled to stay in Norway can be returned to the countries from which they come from.”[87]

Sweden’s Migration Minister Heléne Fritzon canceled a meeting due to be held with Sylvi Listhaug in August of 2017, claiming that Listhaug spread an “inaccurate image of Sweden.” Listhaug said in an interview with Verdens Gang that “parallel societies have developed in more than 60 places in Sweden”, calling them “no-go zones”, while insisting that there are conditions of lawlessness in some areas with large quantities of people with immigrant backgrounds.[88][89]

Law and order

As Minister of Justice, Listhaug received criticism and praise for calling pedophile perpetrators for “monsters.”[90] Listhaug announced more legislative changes to stop pedophiles committing assaults abroad, and told reporters: “It is absolutely terrible to think that these monsters are allowed to leave our country and travel to places where poor families and poor children are exploited in the worst way.” Listhaug added that “we must do whatever we can to stop them.” She is a proponent of stripping these individuals of their passports when sentenced for this type of abuse, not allowing them to leave the country.[91][92]

She has advocated for "zero tolerance" on crime and called for more visible police, primarily in the capital of Oslo.[93] She has advocated for stricter punishments and harsher prison sentencing, particularly for crimes against children. Listhaug is opposed to capital punishment.[94][95]

Agricultural policy

Listhaug during a meeting with the Sami Parliament of Norway, 2014.

Listhaug served as Minister of Agriculture and Food from 2013-2015, and implemented new agricultural policies signaling a drastic change of course. The new policies allowed for more freely sales- and purchases of farms, while also seeking fewer and bigger, sustainable farms.[96] As minister, she lowered government payments to farmers, who receive one of the highest levels of government subsidies in the world, according to the OECD. During her tenure, the department also sought to scrap the law which makes it a duty to live on the farm. The changes could lead to larger farms and a more efficient food production, which the department argued would reduce the country’s high food prices.[97]

Foreign policy

A strong supporter of Israel with her study trip to the country during her teacher studies, Listhaug has voiced support for moving the Norwegian embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.[69]

Listhaug told reporters in 2017 that European nations “and their citizens need to understand the situation in Israel better,” and added that “the Progress Party has always been a supporter of Israel’s need to protect themselves in a region where you are the only democracy.” She made it clear that the party does not necessarily support everything the State of Israel does, but stated that “you have a right to defend your people and your borders because you live in a region that has a lot of problems.”[98]

During the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election, Listhaug stated to Verdens Gang that she tends to support the Republican Party, however, not Donald Trump. She made it clear that she was “no fan of Hillary Clinton”, but was concerned about Trump’s statements regarding NATO and free trade.[99][100][101] Listhaug is noted as an admirer of Ronald Reagan.[102][103]

Social issues

Listhaug originally opposed the introduction of same-sex marriage in Norway in 2009,[104] but in 2017 said she had turned to support it and become critical of Visjon Norge leader Jan Hanvold.[105]

Job approval ratings

Sylvi Listhaug received the highest approval rating of all government ministers from her party during her tenure as Minister of Immigration. An August 2016 poll by Ipsos for Dagbladet showed her job approval rating at 59%, up from 55% in May.[106][107][108]

Political resume

Listhaug’s experience in parliament and government include:[109][110]

  • 2001-2004: Political advisor for Church, Education and Research Fraction, Progress Party's parliamentary group.
  • 2001-2005: Substitute member of the parliament for Oslo.
  • 2002-2006: Member of the Progress Party's Youth central board.
  • 2004-2005: Council secretary of welfare and social services.
  • 2005: Intern for Congressman Mark Kirk (R-IL) in the U.S. House of Representatives.
  • 2005-2009: Substitute member of the parliament for Møre and Romsdal.
  • 2005-: Member of the Progress Party’s central board.
  • 2006-2010: Oslo City Commissioner of Welfare and Social Services.
  • 2009-2013: Substitute member of the parliament for Oslo.
  • 2010-2012: Council member for Health and care for the elderly.
  • 2013-2015: Minister of Agriculture and Food.
  • 2015-2018: Minister of Immigration and Integration.
  • 2017-2021: Member of the parliament for Møre and Romsdal.
  • 2017-2021: Member of the parliament's Standing Committee on Health and Care Services.
  • 2018: Minister of Justice.
  • 2018-: First Deputy Leader of the Progress Party

Personal life

Listhaug is married to fellow Progress Party politician Espen Espeset, and together they have one daughter and two sons.[111][112][113] Raised on the family farm in Ørskog in Sunnmøre, Listhaug currently resides in Oslo.

Publications

Listhaug is set to release her first book in 2018.[114]

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  83. https://www.thelocal.no/20160405/norway-wants-to-jail-groundless-asylum-seekers
  84. https://www.thelocal.no/20160330/norways-integration-minister-we-cant-be-like-sweden
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  87. http://norwaytoday.info/news/listhaug-wants-return-agreements-in-place-with-east-africa/
  88. https://www.thelocal.no/20170829/meeting-between-swedish-and-norwegian-ministers-scrapped-following-no-go-zone-claims
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  91. http://speisa.com/modules/articles/index.php/item.4072/norway-goes-to-war-against-pedophilia.html
  92. https://www.dagbladet.no/nyheter/min-jobb-er-a-redde-barn/69412005
  93. https://www.nrk.no/ostlandssendingen/sylvi-listhaug-_frp_-1.6664438
  94. https://www.vl.no/samfunn/frp-velgere-vil-ha-dodsstraff-i-norge-1.55128?paywall=true
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  99. https://www.aftenposten.no/norge/politikk/i/B64n0/Ulf-Leirstein-er-den-eneste-norske-topp-politikeren-som-apent-stotter-Donald-Trump
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  101. https://www.aftenposten.no/norge/politikk/i/76zo/11-av-de-beste-sitatene-fra-tirsdagens-innvandringsdebatt-i-Stortinget
  102. http://www.bondebladet.no/article/vaert-harde-tak/
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  104. "Listhaug sier ja til homo-ekteskap og er blitt kritisk til Hanvold". Dagen (in Norwegian). 18 December 2017.
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  106. https://www.abcnyheter.no/nyheter/norge/2016/02/24/195201657/listhaug-danker-ut-jensen-i-maling
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  108. https://www.regjeringen.no/en/historical-archive/solbergs-government/andre-dokumenter/jd/2015/minister-of-immigration-and-integration-sylvi-listhaug/id2467581/
  109. https://www.stortinget.no/en/In-English/Members-of-the-Storting/Members/L/listhaug-sylvi/
  110. "HER FÅR HUN SEIERSKYSSET". Se og Hør. Retrieved 9 January 2014.
  111. "Kronprinsessen". Nettavisen.no. Retrieved 9 January 2014.
  112. Reinemo, Martin. "Sylvi Listhaug er blitt trebarnsmor". Retrieved 1 April 2017.
  113. https://www.dagbladet.no/nyheter/varsler-nytt-rabalder/69726328
  • "Sylvi Listhaug" (in Norwegian). Storting.
  • "Former Minister of Justice, Public Security and Immigration Sylvi Listhaug (Progress Party)". Government.no.
  • "Norway's tough-love approach to the refugee crisis". The Spectator. 25 November 2017.
Political offices
Preceded by
Margaret Eckbo
Oslo City Commissioner of Welfare and Social Services
2006–2011
Succeeded by
Anniken Hauglie
Preceded by
Trygve Slagsvold Vedum
Norwegian Minister of Agriculture and Food
2013–2015
Succeeded by
Jon Georg Dale
Preceded by
Office created
Norwegian Minister of Immigration and Integration
2015–2018
Succeeded by
Herself as Minister of Justice, Public Security and Immigration
Preceded by
Per-Willy Amundsen
Norwegian Minister of Justice, Public Security and Immigration
2018
Succeeded by
TBA
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