Knut Sjøli Explained

Knut Torstensen Sjøli (20 February 1877 – 14 February 1955[1]) was a Norwegian politician for the Labour Party.

He was born at Sand i Odal as a son of farmer and cooper Torsten Knudsen Sjøli (1847–1921) and Inge Jørgensdatter (1851–1927). He spent his career as a smallholder in Nord-Odal and a construction worker in Eastern Norway. In Nord-Odal he chaired the school board and was a member of the health council, congregational council, debt committee and several other boards. He was a member of the county tax board, and a deputy member of the Riksskattestyret.[2]

He was a member of Nord-Odal municipal council for about thirty years, and served as deputy mayor. He was a six-term representative to the Parliament of Norway. First, he was elected from the single-member constituency Vinger og Odalen in 1915 and 1918. After the institution of plural-member constituencies, he was re-elected in 1921. The Labour Party then split with the majority of party members and voters in Hedmark aligning with the Communist Party; thus after the 1924 parliamentary election Sjøli only became a deputy MP. In 1927 however, the bulk of the Hedmark Communist Party re-aligned with Labour, and Sjøli won re-elections in the 1930 parliamentary election, 1933 parliamentary election and 1936 parliamentary elections.[2]

Notes and References

  1. News: Knut T. Sjøli . 20 July 2024 . Glåmdalen . 16 February 1955 . Norwegian.
  2. Web site: Knut Torstensen Sjøli. Norwegian Social Science Data Services (NSD). Norwegian. 19 November 2012.