Norway’s gambling reform campaigners are still optimistic about eventual progress, even though the centre-left Labour Party secured victory in the September election, said Carl Fredrik Stenstrøm, secretary general of the Norwegian gaming association (NBO).
He acknowledged that the result ensures Norway’s state-run monopoly system will remain in place for at least another two years.
Stenstrøm, however, stressed that growing parliamentary backing for a licensing system provides grounds for continued hope. In the 8 September vote, the Labour Party formed a coalition of five parties that firmly support Norsk Tipping’s monopoly. By contrast, the Conservative Party, Progress Party, and Liberal Party had each advocated for a licensing framework prior to the election.
He emphasized that the central issue should be player protection rather than government revenue. Stenstrøm argued that a regulated licensing model would more effectively channel players toward legitimate operators that offer stronger safeguards.
Fredrik Stenstrøm, secretary general of the Norwegian gaming association, mentioned:
The most important argumentwould be the need for a better protection of problem gamblers, and that’s the only reason that you have a monopoly in Norway.
It’s not about the money. It’s not about money going to good causes, even though that is the hot potato in Norway.