Background
He was born as Torgeir Rui in Fyresdal as a son of farmers.
He was born as Torgeir Rui in Fyresdal as a son of farmers.
Upon graduating from Asker Seminary in 1889, he was hired as a school teacher in Modum. Vraa joined the Liberal Party, where Christopher Hornsrud was a leading figure on the left wing, but in 1897 the two joined the Labour Party. From 1902 to 1904 he was a journalist in the Labour Party newspaper Social-Demokraten in Kristiania.
From 17 May 1905 he was the first editor-in-chief of the newly established Labour Party newspaper Fremtiden in Drammen, where he contributed to defining local journalism as a genre.
Vraa was elected to the Parliament of Norway in 1906 for the constituency Strømsø og Tangen. In the next election in 1909 he lost this support and was not re-elected.
He instead served as deputy mayor of Drammen from 1910 to 1913. In total he was a city council member from 1910 to 1919 and 1922 to 1928.
He was also county chairman for a period, and national board member from 1904 to 1912 and 1918 to 1920.
He did not join any splinter party in 1921 to 1923, but stayed in the Labour Party, and gained a parliamentary seat in the elections 1924 and 1930, representing the constituency Market towns of Buskerud county. He died in June 1934 in Drammen, and was editor-in-chief until his death. The collected writings Artikler og petiter were published posthumously in 1936.
A statue of him was raised in Drammen in 1936, and streets or squares have been named after him in Drammen and Skien.
Norwegian Labour Party, Liberal Party.
He was a member of the Protocol Committee. Foreign both terms he was a member of the Standing Committee on Forestry and Waterways.