Elverum Authorization
The Elverum Authorization (Norwegian: Elverumsfullmakta) allowed the Cabinet of Norway to temporarily and legitimately assert absolute authority given that the Storting (the Norwegian parliament) was no longer able to convene in ordinary session in Oslo. The action was approved unanimously by the Storting in the town of Elverum on 9 April 1940, after the Norwegian Royal Family, the Cabinet, and the Storting had evacuated Oslo to evade capture by German troops in the course of Operation Weserübung during World War II.[1]
Text
The authorization reads, in translated form:
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Significance
The authorization is of historical significance because it allowed the Norwegian executive branch to assert legitimacy – even while in exile.
Debate
The authorization is controversial in that it constituted a complete abandonment of the legislative powers in Norway during the war. The issue was brought to the Supreme Court of Norway, which ruled that the authorization was legitimate and valid.
Critics have pointed to the fact that the authorization was never formally put to a vote, and that it in any case was invalid because there was no constitutional basis for the Storting to hand over its functions to the executive branch. These critics also claim that Section 17 – which was invoked in the authorization – only authorized emergency powers within the areas of "trade", "customs", "economy" and "police" until the Storting could be seated again.
Result
In any event, the legitimacy of the exiled government was to little extent called into question during the war, except by the Quisling government and the German occupying power.
References
- ↑ "Elverum Authorization" (in Norwegian). NorgesLexi.com. Retrieved 2008-08-28.
Coordinates: 60°52′53″N 11°33′50″E / 60.8814°N 11.5639°E