Honestly, Viking, you just disappointed me. I thought you knew this. But, since you don't, I'll explain:
First off, do you remember Labour's flirt with KRF last year? A lot of people thought that alliance was far-fetched and surprising, and showed that labour was desperate to find new partners. In reality, however, it was not. The christians and the social democrats in Norway go way back. I assume you know of Arild Edvartsen, norway's missionary king? He was just one of many important christian leaders with labour membership.
When the labour movement started off in the late 19th century, they allied with the grasroot christian movement(lekmannsbevegelsen). They did this for several reasons, the primary one was of course that they both viewed themselves as in opposition to the establishment. Another reason was their fight against the absolute poverty and the social disaster area Norway was at that time. Amalie Skram paints rather shocking images of how life was on the outside back then in all of her novels(If you haven't read anything of her, I heartily recommend Hellemyrsfolket). Alcoholism was seen as one of the key factors that ruined peoples lives(and it is in Skram's work too, along with power abuses), and both lead people to damnation(christians) and tightened the upper classes grip on the status quo(workers).
This alliance between the workers movement and the evangelicals is what has shaped our nations alcohol policy, and it is still in effect today. Even if the associated political parties are in different blocks at the present time, the bond is still strong in the organizations themselves.
Not that I have the slightest problem with all this.
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