Results of the general election to the Storting, the parliament of Norway, held on September 13, 1993. The Labour Party won a plurality of votes and seats, while the Centre Party gained 21 new seats.
Parliamentaryelections were held in Norway on 12 September 2005.
The election was won by the opposition centre-left Red-Green Coalition, which took 87 seats, dominated by the Labour Party's 61 seats.
The red-green coalition was the winner of the election and formed a majority government, with Jens Stoltenberg as prime minister, on October 17, 2005, as soon as a national budget for 2006 had been proposed by the old government.
Norwegian courts do not attach the same weight to judicial precedents as members of the judiciary in common law countries traditionally have done.
Neither are Norwegian courts bound by intricate rules concerning the admissibility of evidence; the basic rule is that all evidence is admissible.
On August 27, 1993, a Royal Resolution was issued, extending police prosecution powers to encompass different types of felonies, such as breaking and entering, falsification of documents, larceny, fraud and vandalism.