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| | Vidkun Quisling - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Nasjonal Samling had an anti-democratic, Führerprinzip-based political structure, and Quisling was to be the party's Fører (Norwegian: 'Leader', equivalent of the German 'Führer'), much as Adolf Hitler was for the National Socialist German Workers Party (Nazi Party) in Germany. |
 | | The party went on to have modest successes; in the election of 1933, four months after the party was formed, it garnered 27,850 votes, following support from the Norwegian Farmer's Aid Association, with which Quisling had connections from his time as a member of the Agrarian government. |
 | | Subsequently these sentences have been controversial, since capital punishment was reintroduced to the Norwegian legal system by the exile government at the end of the war, in anticipation of the post war trials. |
| en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Vidkun_Quisling (677 words) |
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