Norway's Labour Party faces a dramatic drop in support according to the latest political survey. The party now stands at 23.9 percent support, down 4.1 percentage points from the election results two months ago.
The poll reveals Labour is losing voters to all other parties. The Progress Party emerges as the clear leader with 26.8 percent support.
The Conservative Party also gains ground, increasing by 2.4 percentage points compared to the election. The Christian Democratic Party falls below the 4 percent electoral threshold required for parliamentary representation.
The Liberal Party also experiences a decline. With two center-right parties now below the threshold, the left-green coalition maintains power by the slimmest possible margin of 85 parliamentary seats.
Complete party support figures show: Labour 23.9% (-4.1), Conservatives 17.0% (+2.4), Centre Party 6.1% (+0.5), Progress Party 26.8% (+3.0), Socialist Left 5.1% (-0.5), Red Party 6.1% (+0.8), Liberals 2.5% (-1.2), Green Party 4.9% (+0.2), Christian Democrats 3.4% (-0.8).
The November political barometer surveyed 1,001 telephone interviews between October 27 and November 3. Only the changes for Labour, Progress Party and Liberals fall outside the margin of error.
This represents one of Labour's sharpest declines in recent political polling history. The dramatic shift suggests Norwegian voters are rapidly reconsidering their political allegiances just months after the national election.