Colorcode: | red |
Red Youth | |
Native Name: | Bokmål, Norwegian; Norwegian Bokmål: Rød Ungdom|italics=no |
Leader: | Amrit Pernille Kaur |
Deputy Leader: | Halvor Bergkvist, Ahmed Al-Saedi |
Secretary General: | Syver Kleve Kolstad |
Treasurer: | Mina Rollag Torvik |
Ideology: | Communism Revolutionary socialism[1] Feminism |
Headquarters: | Oslo |
Mother Party: | Red Party |
Red Youth (Bokmål, Norwegian; Norwegian Bokmål: Rød Ungdom; Norwegian Nynorsk; Nynorsk, Norwegian: Raud Ungdom; abbr. RU) is a Norwegian youth organisation. It is the youth wing of the Red Party, which was formed from a merger of the Red Electoral Alliance and the Workers' Communist Party in March 2007. The current leader of Red Youth is Amrit Pernille Kaur.
It is an organisation with three main principles: revolutionary socialism, feminism, and communism.[1] Their goals are typically communist; they aim to organise the working class in preparation for what they perceive as an eventual overthrow of the capitalist system.
Since the election of the Red-Green government in 2005, Red Youth has been working to push the Labour Party and the Socialist Left Party in a communist direction. In August 2008, a faction of communist dissidents left the youth organization to form Revolutionary Communist Youth, the youth affiliate of Serve the People.
Red Youth is an activist organisation, and has performed political actions and media stunts directed towards Norwegian politicians. Red Youth interrupted the Christian Democratic Party's national meeting in 2004 in an attempt to expose and highlight what they perceived as the Christian Democrats' anti-homosexual attitude.[2] [3] Also in 2004, members attempted to 'arrest' the Conservative Minister of Education, Kristin Clemet, for allegedly breaking the Norwegian law that secondary education must be free since students were still required to buy textbooks.[4]
The Red Youth also built a refugee asylum in the garden of the Conservative Minister of Local Government, Erna Solberg, in 2008, as a protest against her immigration policies.[5] In 2010, the Red Youth launched a campaign to collect 100,000 NOK to offer Siv Jensen, party leader of the Progress Party, to leave the country in response to her own party's proposal to offer immigrants the same sum to go back to their own countries.[6]
At the end of the 1990s and the early 2000s, Rød Ungdom (Red Youth) campaigned for free school textbooks. In the fall of 2001, Rød Ungdom made 14 school textbooks available for free download on the internet.[7]