
The general meeting of the opposition’s Progressive Party (Framsóknarflokkurinn) is taking place this weekend, where the party’s campaign goals for the upcoming parliamentary election in late April will be set.
Sigmundur Davíð Gunnlaugsson at parliament. Photo: Páll Kjartansson/Iceland Review.
In the latest polls, 14-21 percent of respondents said they were going to vote the Progressive Party.
In his opening speech on Friday, Progressive Party chair Sigmundur Davíð Gunnlaugsson criticized the parties wanting to continue the process of joining the European Union, dv.is reports.
“There is a party in this country which is running under more than one name and maintains that entering the EU and adopting the euro is not only a solution to all our problems but the only solution,” Sigmundur said.
He referred to the Social-Democratic Alliance and the new party Björt framtíð (‘Bright Future’; BF), which he called the former party’s “satellite.”
Sigmundur stated that the Social Democrats’ EU policy skews the debate “about nearly all urgent matters and even blocks real solutions, because they would rather wait for solutions from the European Union.”
“Progress [framsókn] for the home, progress for the economy, progress for Iceland,” were the chairman’s final words.
The coalition’s Left-Green Movement and the opposition’s Independence Party have scheduled their general meetings for the last weekend of February, while the Social-Democratic Alliance’s meeting took place one week ago.
PS
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The 2013 June-July issue of Iceland Review is out. Themed ‘We Are Young’ the magazine celebrates the arrival of summer by interviewing young energetic Icelanders who excel in art, sports, business and politics—and Sigmundur Davíð Gunnlaugsson, the youngest PM in the republic’s history and the world’s youngest ruling state leader. Click here to take a look at a selection of the current issue and here to subscribe to the magazine.
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The road to Höfn, a 1,690-person harbor town by the fjord Hornafjörður, is lined with reindeer. Whole herds of the wild horned animals rest peacefully on withered pastures, grace next to sheep and horses and bounce along the road. Soon, Vatnajökull, Europe’s largest glacier and the region’s biggest attraction, comes into view. Looming over Höfn, its outlet glaciers flow down from the mountains on which the bright white icecap rests.
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