[3][4] The following year it was renamed as Arbejderbladet (Danish: The Worker's Paper) after the formation of the Communist Federation.
[10] The paper claimed in the early 1950s that the American Federal Bureau of Investigation was like the Gestapo describing the Truman administration as a Fascist government.
[11] In the 1960s the subscribers of Land og Folk included large number of Russians, and the paper was sent to Moscow each day.
[9] However, a rift occurred between the paper and the DKP central committee in 1968 when the Soviet Union invaded Czechoslovakia.
[12] Frede Jakobsen served as the editor-in-chief of Land og Folk[13] which was based in Copenhagen.