Hans Andreas Hanssen (29 April 1873 – 1960) was a Norwegian newspaper editor and politician for the Labour Party. He served two terms as an MP, and edited the newspapers Smaalenenes Social-Demokrat, Nybrott, 1ste Mai and Folket. He was a temperance activist in the years before World War II, and then joined Nasjonal Samling and worked as a priest.
He was born in Kråkerøy as a son of a blacksmith. After finishing middle school in 1889 he worked different office jobs in Fredrikstad, Fredrikshald and Kristiania. In 1906 he founded the newspaper Smaalenenes Social-Demokrat in Fredrikstad, and edited it until 1909. He moved to Fredrikshald where he traded art and ran a cigar shop. He served in the city council from 1910 to 1916, the first three years as deputy mayor. He was elected to the Parliament of Norway from the city in 1912, and served one term.
In 1916 he moved to Larvik to edit the newspaper Nybrott. He edited 1ste Mai in Stavanger from 1919 before returning to Larvik in 1921, this time as manager in Folkets Dagblad, established by a merger of Nybrott and Bratsberg-Demokraten. He was elected to the Parliament of Norway from the Market towns of Vestfold county in 1921, and served his second term. He was not re-elected. In the summer of 1923 he resigned his membership in the Labour Party, because of the religion policy of the Comintern. Hanssen was an active Methodist. He did not rejoin the Labour Party when it left the Comintern in late 1923, because he was still a "revolutionary internationalist".