Fatherland League
Fedrelandslaget |
|
---|---|
Chairman |
Joakim Lehmkuhl (1925–38) Victor Mogens (1938–40) |
Founded | 25 January 1925 |
Dissolved | 25 September 1940 |
Newspaper |
Norges Fremtid (1927–32) ABC (1932–40) |
Membership | 100,000 (1930) |
Ideology |
Conservatism Anti-communism Norwegian nationalism Corporatism |
Political position | Right-wing |
Colors | Red, white, blue |
The Fatherland League (Norwegian: Fedrelandslaget) was a right-wing, anti-communist political organisation in Norway. Founded in 1925, the movement aimed to unite all centre-to-right forces against the rise of the revolutionary Marxist labour movement. Organizing strikebreakers is one way they would prove to suffice[]. At its peak of popular support and influence around 1930 it was the single largest mass movement ever organised on the political right in Norway, with estimated 100.000 members[]. The movement began to decline through the 1930s, followed by some unsuccessful attempts to gain direct influence as a political party. The Fatherland League was banned and dissolved upon the German occupation of Norway in 1940.
By the initiative of young industrialist Joakim Lehmkuhl, the organisation was co-founded with national hero Fridtjof Nansen and Norway's first Prime Minister Christian Michelsen. Former Prime Minister Jens Bratlie also joined the organisation. The Fatherland League's goal was a national coalition of all centre-to-right "bourgeoise" (borgerlige) and nationally minded forces, in opposition to the emerging revolutionary Marxist labour movement. The organisation gained particular support from the Free-minded Liberal Party and the Farmers' Party, while it was met with scepticism by the Conservative Party, and largely rejection by the Liberal Party. The labour movement in turn saw the organisation as a seeding ground for a fascist movement.