Pål Steigan
Pål Steigan | |
---|---|
Leader of the Workers' Communist Party | |
In office 1975–1984 | |
Preceded by | Sigurd Allern |
Succeeded by | Kjersti Ericsson |
Leader of the Red Electoral Alliance | |
In office 1975–1979 | |
Preceded by | Sigurd Allern |
Succeeded by | Hilde Haugsgjerd |
Personal details | |
Born | Oslo, Norway | 31 May 1949
Other political affiliations | Workers' Communist Party Red Electoral Alliance |
Residence(s) | Oslo, Norway |
Part of a series on |
Nordic M-L Movement |
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Organisations |
Denmark: KAP |
Personalities |
Nils Holmberg |
Ideologies |
Maoism |
Communism Portal |
Pål Steigan (born 31 May 1949) is a Norwegian writer and politician, best known as founder of the newspaper Klassekampen and the website Steigan.no. He was leader of the Maoist Workers' Communist Party, AKP (m-l) from 1975 to 1984, and co-leader of the Red Electoral Alliance (RV) until 1979.[1][2] Both parties were small fringe parties that were never represented in parliament during his tenure. He co-founded Klassekampen as a monthly periodical in 1969, and during his leadership AKP developed the periodical into a newspaper in 1977. He later founded the alternative news website Steigan.no that is described by mainstream Norwegian media as a platform of Russian propaganda, conspiracy theories, racism and transphobia.[3][4][5]
Workers Communist Party, AKP (m-l)
[edit]He co-founded Klassekampen as a monthly periodical in 1969, and during his leadership AKP (m-l) developed the periodical into a newspaper in 1977.
During his leadership of AKP (m-l), Steigan traveled to countries under communist regimes, such as China, Czechoslovakia, Albania and Cambodia (Democratic Kampuchea).[1] He met Mao Zedong, Enver Hoxha and Pol Pot.[6]
After meeting the Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot in 1978, he began to support the regime,[7] later admitting his support for the genocidal Khmer Rouge was a mistake explaining that he now believed it was not Marxist.[8] He has continued to be criticised for bearing a personal responsibility for his political support to the regime.[7]
In 1978, he told an interviewer from The Call, the newspaper of the American Communist Party (Marxist–Leninist), that since the foundation of the party five years earlier "we have been waging a struggle against two brands of revisionism" in Norway, "the Brezhnevist, Moscow revisionist type party, which is the old so-called Norwegian Communist Party, and a newer Eurorevisionist party."[9] According to Steigan in the same interview: "[I]t’s obvious that the Soviet social-imperialists are planning to take Norway in the initial stages of a war over Europe."[10]
He is a critic of capitalism, writing that it "has inflicted so many defeats upon the working class and people all over the world that it’s hard to give an account of them."[11]
Steigan.no
[edit]Steigan founded the self-proclaimed "anti-globalist" alternative news site Steigan.no that has been widely criticized for promoting Russian propaganda, conspiracy theories, racism and transphobia.[4][5] The website has been described by extremism researcher John Færseth as a platform of conspiracy theories and pro-Kremlin disinformation and propaganda,[3][12] and as an example of "red–brown convergence" with links to the alt-right.[13]
According to the fact checking website Faktisk.no, Steigan is part of an alternative and far-right echo chamber that also includes Document.no, Rights.no, Resett and Lykten.no, and where individuals linked to Stop Islamisation of Norway play a prominent role.[14] In 2022 Faktisk.no wrote that Steigan is the main promoter of Russian propaganda among alternative media in Norway.[15][16][17]
The secretary-general of the left-wing Red party Benedikte Pryneid Hansen said the leadership of the party shares the view that Steigan is a platform of "onesided Russian war propaganda, conspiracy theories, racism and transphobia",[5] and that the blog is increasingly characterized by "extreme conspiracy theories."[18] Anne-Marith Rasmussen, the president of Red in Troms and chair of the party’s LGBT committee, said Steigan is a "blog that promotes racism, homophobia and transphobia" as well as Russian propaganda, and that is a threat to democracy.[19]
Steigan was denied membership in the Norwegian Association of Newspaper Editors (Norsk Redaktørforening), with the rationale that Steigan.no is not a journalistic medium, but rather an activist website that disregards accepted journalistic principles.[20]
Some of the blog's writers include prominent Norwegian anti-semite[21] Hans Olav Brendberg and Swedish anti-transgender activist Kajsa Ekis Ekman.[22]
Books
[edit]Steigan's memoirs En folkefiende (A public enemy) were published in 2013.[6]
Steigan, Pål, Veiskille: finnes det noen vei ut av miljøkrisa? Oktober Forlag, Oslo, 1990, 244 s.
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Pål Steigan", Store norske leksikon, 29.12.2012
- ^ Arbeidernes Kommunistparti in Store norske leksikon (in Norwegian)
- ^ a b Færseth, John (2021). Fyrtårnet i øst: Putins Russland og vestlige ekstremister. Humanist forlag. ISBN 9788282821704.
- ^ a b "Propaganda-påstander: Tok ikke kontakt". Dagbladet. Retrieved 3 May 2022.
- ^ a b c "Ikke alle liker at Moxnes tar oppgjør med Steigan.no". Aftenposten. Retrieved 3 May 2022.
- ^ a b "Pål Steigan: - Vi dro det for langt", Aftenposten, 17.09.2003
- ^ a b "Det unnvikende oppgjøret", Dagbladet, 17 July 2003
- ^ "Pål Steigan slår tilbake mot folkemord-anklager", Dagbladet, 17 July 2003
- ^ "Interview with Norway's Pal Steigan". The Call. marxists.org. 26 June 1978. Retrieved 16 February 2020.
- ^ The Call (marxists.org), 3 July 1978
- ^ Steigan, Pål (February 27, 2017). "Lessons from an oblivious enemy". Steigan.no. Retrieved January 3, 2021.
- ^ "Flere norske alternativmedier fungerer som «kanaler» for russisk desinformasjon og propaganda". Journalisten. Retrieved 19 March 2022.
- ^ "Bonzo goes to Oslo: Christian fundamentalists and the far-right strike a new pose". Retrieved 19 March 2022.
- ^ "SIAN sentrale i spredningen av innhold fra alternative medier". Faktisk. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
- ^ "Slik spres russisk propaganda i norske alternative medier" [How Russian propaganda is promoted in Norwegian alternative media]. Faktisk.no. Retrieved 30 April 2022.
- ^ "Hevdes å spre russisk propaganda: Kari Jaquesson medeier" [Accused of spreading Russian propaganda, Kari Jaquesson a co-owner]. Dagbladet. Retrieved 30 April 2022.
- ^ "Ap-Raymond om Rødt-bråket: Kast ut Steigan-tilhengerne!". Verdens Gang. Retrieved 30 April 2022.
Faktisk.no skrev i mars i år at steigan.no skiller seg ut som den aktøren som sprer klart mest russisk propaganda blant norske alternative medier.
[Faktisk.no wrote in March this year that steigan.no stands out as the outlet that is by far the largest promoter of Russian propaganda among Norwegian alternative media.] - ^ "Full splid i Raudt om Steigan.no". NRK. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
- ^ "Innkaller til møte om Harstad-politiker: – Ødeleggende for demokratiet og klassekampen". iHarstad. Retrieved 3 May 2022.
- ^ Steigan.no fikk avslag på søknad om medlemskap i Norsk Redaktørforening: – Patetisk
- ^ "– Gruppering samles i hemmelighet rundt antisemittisk budskap i Oslo neste uke. Jeg håper flest mulig protesterer". Vårt Oslo. Retrieved 3 May 2022.
- ^ "Kan diskuteres om boken i det hele tatt fortjener omtale" [It is debatable whether this book deserves any discussion at all]. Morgenbladet. 16 July 2021.