Peace and Justice (, FOR) is a Norwegian political party registered in 2024. It was founded in May 2023 by , the former deputy leader of the Red Party, after the Red Party supported Norwegian arms deliveries to Ukraine in its national convention following the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Peace and Justice ran in all 19 constituencies in the 2025 Norwegian parliamentary election.
The party's name and inspiration come from Jeremy Corbyn's Peace & Justice Project. Positioning itself as anti-war and pacifist, it has opposed Norwegian arms deliveries to Ukraine and supports peace negotiations between Russia and Ukraine. The party is also opposed to NATO and the EU.
It has been accused of promoting pro-Russian policies and Russian disinformation narratives during the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Since its founding in 2023, the party has come under scrutiny for its funding ties to Atle Berge, who financed the partyâÂÂs high-profile 2025 pro-Russian election campaign that attacked Norwegian support for Ukraine. One of the party's main candidates and the figurehead of the election campaign, Glenn Diesen, has been criticized for promoting Russian propaganda for several years.
FOR's youth party, named Young Anti-Imperialism, was founded during the party's national convention in May 2025.
The party has positioned itself as pacifist and is critical of Norwegian military aid to Ukraine. It is anti-Zionist and supports boycotts of Israel, claiming that Israel contributes to Islamophobia through its relationship with Palestine. It is also against economic sanctions on Venezuela, Syria and Iran and wants to give asylum to Edward Snowden and other whistleblowers.
It opposes the EU, EEA, NATO and other "undemocratic supranational bodies" and believes that free immigration from the EU leads to social dumping. It is against American military bases in Norway and claims that slimming down the military budget can finance welfare benefits such as free dental care, free kindergarten and after-school care, free school meals and all sports and cultural activities for children and young people.
It wants to close down the Norwegian Police Security Service and Norwegian Intelligence Service. It is against oil exploration and believes that renewable energy can only be built where this does not conflict with nature conservation. It wants the Sámi Parliament to be given the right of veto against all encroachments on nature in traditional Sámi lands.
The party has been accused of adopting a rhetoric that aligns closely with RussiaâÂÂs justifications for its invasion of Ukraine. Peace and Justice has drawn sharp criticism from across the Norwegian political spectrum, including accusations of operating as a de facto conduit for Russian disinformation operations in Norway. Critics argue that the partyâÂÂs messaging serves to undermine Western unity and public support for Ukraine by promoting false equivalences and relativizing RussiaâÂÂs aggression. Numerous political commentators and members of parliament have accused Peace and Justice of acting as a mouthpiece for Russian interests. Jørn Sund-Henriksen, the leader of the Norwegian-Ukrainian friendship association, characterizes the party as a Russian proxy operating within the framework of hybrid warfare. He argues that its messaging, activities, funding, and use of Russian disinformation align with known Russian intelligence strategies aimed at eroding public trust, destabilizing democratic institutions, and weakening support for Ukraine.
Mulonda Rashidi, the leader of FOR's youth party, Young Anti-Imperialism, has expressed support for North Korea, which he described as "one of the freest and most democratic countries in the world."
The party has received praise from the neo-Nazi organization Vigrid.
In May 2025, Peace and Justice launched an expensive and controversial advertising campaign for the 2025 Norwegian parliamentary election on OsloâÂÂs public transport network with pictures of Leraand (candidate for the constituency of Oslo) and Glenn Diesen (candidate for constituency of Akershus), criticizing NorwayâÂÂs financial and military support for Ukraine. The campaign, which featured slogans opposing the governmentâÂÂs 85 billion-kroner aid package to Kyiv, was widely denounced as a propaganda stunt. The party initially refused to disclose who had financed the 1.4 million kroner campaign, later revealed to be controversial Russian-based billionaire Atle Berge. The incident triggered an investigation by the Norwegian Party Law Committee, which found that it all seem to be done according to Norwegian law. The advertising posters for FOR on the subway in Oslo were torn down in many places shortly after they were hung up. Mathilde Tybring-Gjedde of the Conservative Party described the partyâÂÂs advertisements as âÂÂan echo of Russian propaganda,â a sentiment echoed in national media coverage.