Wednesday, February 25, 2015

New shock measurement for FRP – Dagbladet.no

New shock measurement for FRP – Dagbladet.no

(Dagbladet): FRP gets record low 9.2 percent support in February poll, which is conducted by Sentio Research Norway Dagens Næringsliv. It is the poorest FRP support Sentio has measured since they started making party measurements DN in October 1997, writes DN.

At the same time the Labor record high 43.4 percent. Prime Minister Erna Solberg Right falls by two percentage points from January poll, and are down 21.4 percent. In summary, the measurement that coalition majority is back with a good margin.

Progress has claimed polls lost over 200,000 voters since the 2013 election, when the party got 16.3 percent support.

This joins the ranks of bad measurements for the ruling party, which is struggling with support for several heavy cases recently.

– Mainly it concerns political support. Here we have all the potential for improvement, whether in government, parliamentary or represent the party in a different way, says FRP deputy Per Sandberg to DN.

FRP’s parliamentary leader Harald T. Nesvik told Dagbladet that he is not satisfied with the numbers.

– It is not good enough. We certainly has a job to do related to highlighting what we have achieved over the past year and a half, it has in some ways drowned in other things. Therefore, we must simply work harder and get better at eliciting what we have accomplished.

Nesvik- will not put too much emphasis on measurement DN brings tonight and says that the party averaging has achieved a participation right under eleven percent on February polls.

– But it is nevertheless obvious that we have a job to do.

– You see this in the light of the racket between Sandberg and KrF?

– No, I do not. There I see it in light of, is that over time, we have not come through the sound barrier with regard to what we have achieved. We must be better at. And we get to it, you will probably also turn figures. So we’ll just roll up our sleeves and stand on.

LikeTweet

No comments:

Post a Comment