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Guttorm Floistad (politician)

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Name
  
Guttorm Floistad

Guttorm Floistad (28 May 1878 – 22 July 1953) was a Norwegian farmer, bailiff and politician for the Labour, Social Democratic Labour and Conservative parties.

Contents

Early career and local politics

He was born at Ostre Moland as a son of bailiff and politician Ivar Guttormsen Floistad (1846–1926) and Ingeborg Herveland (1844–1939). After finishing folk high school in 1896 and agricultural school in 1897, he was a farmer at Morfjaer in Stokken from 1900 to 1923 and the family farm Floistad in Ostre Moland from 1923. He was also a bailiff in Stokken from 1902, and from 1921 he doubled as bailiff of Austre Moland too. He held the bailiff position until 1948, except for the years 1943–1945 during the occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany.

He was a member of Ostre Moland or Stokken municipal council from 1904 to 1923 and 1934 to 1940, serving as mayor of Stokken from 1919 to 1921. Stokken had been separated from Ostre Moland as an independent municipality in 1919.

He was married to Gustava, born 1880. Through his oldest son Ivar, he was a grandfather of philosopher Guttorm Floistad.

National politics

He was elected to the Parliament of Norway in the 1912 election from the constituency Nedenes, and served a three-year term. In 1915 Floistad won the first round of voting, with a tally of 1,747 against 1,267 votes for Liberal Aslak Kateraas (with a Gunnar Floistad as running mate) and 1,196 for Conservative Lars Olsen Skjulestad. There was therefore a second round, and the bourgeois parties backed Kateraas to avoid re-election of Floistad. Kateraas (now with Skjulestad as running mate) won with 2,887 votes against Floistad's 2,181. Kateraas was a former mayor of Aamli, but Floistad carried that district as well as Lille Topdal and Froland—on the other hand, Kateraas carried Floistad's home district Ostre Moland as well as Gjovdal, Tromo, Hiso and Oiestad. The same thing happened in 1918. Floistad won the second round with 1,843 votes against 1,444 for Skjulestad and 1,370 for Kateraas. Floistad now faced Skjulestad in the run-off, and lost with 1,688 against 2,340. It was not enough for Floistad to carry Aamli as well as Ostre Moland.

In 1919 Floistad signed a communique that preceded the founding of a splinter party from Labour, the Social Democratic Labour Party. In the 1921 election, plural-member constituencies had been introduced and Floistad headed the Social Democratic ballot for Aust-Agder. Gunnar Floistad was now an Agrarian. Neither were elected. Many years later he served as a deputy representative during the term 1945–1949, but this time for the Conservative Party. In the 1949 election he was promoted to head the Conservative Party ballot for Aust-Agder, but Labour swept three of four seats with the last going to the Liberals. The Conservatives were outrun by the Agrarian Party too. Floistad died in July 1953, some months before the next parliamentary election.

Floistad was a board member of the trade union Norges lensmannslag, and chaired it locally in Aust-Agder from 1924 to 1939 and 1946 to 1948. Upon retiring here he became an honorary member. He also chaired Arendals Meieri (1930–1947, board member since 1907), Aust-Agder Melkecentral (1931–1948) and Aust-Agder Kraftverk (1942–1952, board member since 1934) and was a board member of Nedenes Sparebank (1927–1953), Arendal Museum (1933–1952) and Vestlandske Tidende. In 1947 he was decorated with the King's Medal of Merit in gold.

References

Guttorm Floistad (politician) Wikipedia