The Pirate Party the biggest in Iceland by far By Bjarki Ármannsson 1. maí 2015 16:35 The Icelandic Pirate Party's three members of parliament: Jón Þór Ólafsson (far left), Birgitta Jónsdóttir and Helgi Hrafn Gunnarsson. Vísir/Vilhelm The latest national polls in Iceland show an unprecedented 30,1 per cent support for The Icelandic Pirate Party. It is now the biggest party in Iceland by far, with the ruling Independence Party coming in second with 22,9 per cent.The party has come a long way since the 2013 general elections, when it wasn‘t clear if even a single party member would make it to parliament. Eventually they managed three: Birgitta Jónsdóttir, Helgi Hrafn Gunnarsson and Jón Þór Ólafsson. It‘s fair to say that the three of them have promted a major turnaround in Icelandic politics. Support for the Pirate Party has doubled in the last two months, seemingly in part because of the general public‘s growing discontent towards their current government. The two ruling parties – traditional political powerhouses The Independence Party with 22,9 per cent support and The Progressive Party with 10,1 per cent – combined manage just slighty more support than The Pirate Party. The Pirates themselves see this as a call for significant change. "People are starting to realise that the whole system is corrupt, not just a few politicians," Gunnarsson told Vísir in March. "They don‘t trust it at all. I think they appreciate it when someone points this out." News in English Tengdar fréttir Icelandic MP: Pirate Party associates itself with organized crime "If piracy isn't organized crime then I have no idea what the word means," Vilhjalmur Bjarnason said in the Icelandic parliament today. 24. mars 2015 16:47 Pirate Party dominant among young voters The largest party in Iceland, according to a new poll. 21. mars 2015 09:13 The Pirate Party is now measured as the biggest political party in Iceland Would get about 22% of the total votes if parliamentary elections would take place now 19. mars 2015 10:49 The Pirate Party is now measured as the second biggest party in Iceland Would have 14 members of the Parliament out of 63. Not possible to form a two-party government without them. 13. mars 2015 14:44 A video that will make you smile: This is how you propose to a Pirate Inga Audbjorg Kristjansdottir proposed to Icelandic member of Parliament Helgi Hrafn Gunnarsson by arranging a flashmob during their trip to Germany earlier this month. 14. apríl 2015 13:18 Mest lesið Skip úr skuggaflotanum hægði grunsamlega mikið á sér Erlent Reyndu að ræna hraðbanka Innlent Áfengissala á helgidögum þjóðkirkjunnar stöðvuð af lögreglu Innlent Rússar vara við því að hrapað sé að ályktunum áður en rannsókn lýkur Erlent Hættulega heitir dagar fleiri og mannskæðari en áður Erlent Komu hesti til bjargar úr gjótu Innlent Holtavörðuheiði enn lokuð Innlent Spáir stillu og miklu svifryki um áramótin Veður Icelandair skoðar næstu skref í þróun flugflotans Innlent Þau eru tilnefnd sem maður ársins 2024 Innlent
The latest national polls in Iceland show an unprecedented 30,1 per cent support for The Icelandic Pirate Party. It is now the biggest party in Iceland by far, with the ruling Independence Party coming in second with 22,9 per cent.The party has come a long way since the 2013 general elections, when it wasn‘t clear if even a single party member would make it to parliament. Eventually they managed three: Birgitta Jónsdóttir, Helgi Hrafn Gunnarsson and Jón Þór Ólafsson. It‘s fair to say that the three of them have promted a major turnaround in Icelandic politics. Support for the Pirate Party has doubled in the last two months, seemingly in part because of the general public‘s growing discontent towards their current government. The two ruling parties – traditional political powerhouses The Independence Party with 22,9 per cent support and The Progressive Party with 10,1 per cent – combined manage just slighty more support than The Pirate Party. The Pirates themselves see this as a call for significant change. "People are starting to realise that the whole system is corrupt, not just a few politicians," Gunnarsson told Vísir in March. "They don‘t trust it at all. I think they appreciate it when someone points this out."
News in English Tengdar fréttir Icelandic MP: Pirate Party associates itself with organized crime "If piracy isn't organized crime then I have no idea what the word means," Vilhjalmur Bjarnason said in the Icelandic parliament today. 24. mars 2015 16:47 Pirate Party dominant among young voters The largest party in Iceland, according to a new poll. 21. mars 2015 09:13 The Pirate Party is now measured as the biggest political party in Iceland Would get about 22% of the total votes if parliamentary elections would take place now 19. mars 2015 10:49 The Pirate Party is now measured as the second biggest party in Iceland Would have 14 members of the Parliament out of 63. Not possible to form a two-party government without them. 13. mars 2015 14:44 A video that will make you smile: This is how you propose to a Pirate Inga Audbjorg Kristjansdottir proposed to Icelandic member of Parliament Helgi Hrafn Gunnarsson by arranging a flashmob during their trip to Germany earlier this month. 14. apríl 2015 13:18 Mest lesið Skip úr skuggaflotanum hægði grunsamlega mikið á sér Erlent Reyndu að ræna hraðbanka Innlent Áfengissala á helgidögum þjóðkirkjunnar stöðvuð af lögreglu Innlent Rússar vara við því að hrapað sé að ályktunum áður en rannsókn lýkur Erlent Hættulega heitir dagar fleiri og mannskæðari en áður Erlent Komu hesti til bjargar úr gjótu Innlent Holtavörðuheiði enn lokuð Innlent Spáir stillu og miklu svifryki um áramótin Veður Icelandair skoðar næstu skref í þróun flugflotans Innlent Þau eru tilnefnd sem maður ársins 2024 Innlent
Icelandic MP: Pirate Party associates itself with organized crime "If piracy isn't organized crime then I have no idea what the word means," Vilhjalmur Bjarnason said in the Icelandic parliament today. 24. mars 2015 16:47
Pirate Party dominant among young voters The largest party in Iceland, according to a new poll. 21. mars 2015 09:13
The Pirate Party is now measured as the biggest political party in Iceland Would get about 22% of the total votes if parliamentary elections would take place now 19. mars 2015 10:49
The Pirate Party is now measured as the second biggest party in Iceland Would have 14 members of the Parliament out of 63. Not possible to form a two-party government without them. 13. mars 2015 14:44
A video that will make you smile: This is how you propose to a Pirate Inga Audbjorg Kristjansdottir proposed to Icelandic member of Parliament Helgi Hrafn Gunnarsson by arranging a flashmob during their trip to Germany earlier this month. 14. apríl 2015 13:18