What book are you currently reading?
“Posthornet (the Post Horn) by Vigdis Hjorth, a great book. I got it for Christmas. I really love Vigdis Hjorth as an author and have read nearly everything she has published. Posthornet is partly about becoming politically engaged. I have also just read ‘Jeg nekter’ (I Refuse) by Per Petterson, a previous winner of the Nordic Council Literature Prize. I also liked that a lot.
Which work tool do you appreciate the most in your office?
“The iPad. After I got that I hardly ever use a PC.”
What is your hidden talent?
“I remember song lyrics very well. I’m looking forward to a new musical at the National Theatre with songs from [the Norwegian band] deLillos. I know all the lyrics.”
As a child, what did you want to become when you grew up?
“A teacher. I could very well imagine being one. I really enjoy welcoming pupils to my office. I think it’s particularly exciting to meet people between 16 and 21. That is when most people are being shaped into the human beings they will become. What you read, the music you listen to or theatre plays you watch at that age often have a deep impact. Later in life you often point to books you read at that age as the books which have had the greatest influence on you.”
“For me it is about comprehensive cooperation between employees’ and employers’ organisations, it is about the fact that we have relatively high tax rates and little privatisation of welfare services; most people’s paths will cross either through school, in the elderly care sector or in hospital. It is basically about welfare and taxation levels and conditions in the working life, where there is a great degree of cooperation and small pay gaps.”
Anniken Huitfeldt graduated from the University of Oslo as a Master of Philosophy after studying history, political science and geography. She is the mother of three children aged seven, nine and eleven.