|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
Social Democrats routed in Danish parliamentary election
By Helmut Arens
28 November 2001
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
The Social Democrats suffered a drastic defeat in the Danish
general election, which had been brought forward to November 20.
They polled just over 29 percent of the vote, in contrast to 35.9
percent at the last poll in 1998, reducing their representation
from 63 to 52 in the 179-seat Folketing (parliament).
Outgoing Prime Minister Poul Nyrup Rasmussen, in office since
1993, relinquishes power to the largest of the opposition parties,
the rightwing Liberals (Venstre). Led by Anders Fogh Rasmussen
(no relation), Venstre increased its vote by 7.2 percent, to capture
31.3 percent of the ballot, giving it a total of 56 seats. Fogh
Rasmussen is hoping to form a coalition with the Conservative
Party, which made a slight gain, reaching 9.1 percent and so retaining
its 16 seats. His government will also need the support of the
rightwing extremist Danish Peoples Party, headed by Pia Kjaersgaard,
which gained 4.6 points to reach 12 percent of the vote. Kjaersgaards
party won 22 seats, nine more than its previous total, becoming
the third strongest party in the 179-seat Folketing (parliament).
As a result, a significant move to the right is to be expected
in Danish politics.
For the first time since 1920, the Social Democrats will no
longer be the largest party in the Folketing, and the bourgeois
parties of the centre right have secured their biggest majority
since 1926.
The Social Democrats former coalition partners, the Radical
Liberals (Radikale Venstre), increased their seats by two to nine,
and the ex-Stalinists of the Socialist Peoples Partypreviously
supporters of the governmentlost one of their thirteen seats.
The three-week election campaign was marked by bitter debates
about immigration and refugee policy, with all the parties, including
the Social Democrats, competing to advocate the harshest measures
against asylum seekers.
The Danish Peoples Party set the tone, continually goading
the other parties and accusing the government of not doing enough
to keep foreigners out of the country. The September 11 terrorist
attacks and the governments reaction to them further inflamed
anti-foreigner sentiments, especially towards Muslims. Both government
and opposition demanded harsher controls for immigrants and limitations
on the right of family members to join immigrants residing in
Denmark.
In a televised discussion after his election win, Fogh Rasmussen
announced that under his government, a special ministry for immigration
would be established. The immigrants organisation INDsam
saw a parallel between this and the politics of apartheid and
anti-Semitism. INDsam spokesman Mohammed Gelle expressed the fear
that such a ministry could lead to even more restrictive laws
against immigrants. I fear we might end up with a Jewish
problem, similar to the one in Germany in the 1930sone
law for the Danes and another for new-comers, Gelle said.
In a survey carried out by the newspaper Jyllands Posten,
a number of foreign correspondents from the international press
expressed their dismay at the Danish election campaign. Clare
MacCarthy, a correspondent for the Financial Times, compared
the tone of the election discussion with anti-Pakistani and anti-Indian
rhetoric in Great Britain during the 1960s, which culminated in
rightwing Tory politician Enoch Powells notorious rivers
of blood speech.
It is very unappetising how literally every Danish politician
is prepared to make scapegoats of immigrants simply for the sake
of getting into government, said MacCarthy. It is
primitive, vulgar and pure xenophobia the way politicians are
dishing out one lie after another, trying to bolster their arguments
with dubious statistics.
Charles Farro, a reporter for Americas Newsweek,
called the anti-immigrant tone of the debate shocking.
When I listen to this debate, he wrote, I sometimes
get the impression that there was never any crime in Denmark until
immigrants arrived here.
Osama Al-Habahbech, a correspondent for the Jordanian news
agency, said the politicians had bombed integration twenty
years back into the past. He wrote that Comparisons
have been drawn with Jörg Haider [extreme rightwing leader
of the Austrian Freedom Party], but the tone being set in Denmark
is much worse than in Austria. Common decency seems to have taken
a holiday in recent weeks. If the word Jew were to
be replaced by Muslim, the present campaign could
be compared to the Nazi propaganda during the Second World War.
This criticism is directed primarily against the two far right
parties, Mogens Glistrups Progress Party (which failed to
retain any of its seats) and the Danish Peoples Party, but the
other parties are in no way excluded. Leif Stenberg, the Swedish
immigration expert from Lund University, recently said that he
was disappointed and shocked at the xenophobic tone of the
Danish election campaign. Id be able to understand it if
these attacks came from ultra-right organisations, but even a
respectable party like the Social Democratic Party has jumped
on board.
Even the former foreign minister, Niels Helveg Petersen of
Radikale Venstre, accused politicians of damaging Denmarks
image abroad by adopting such an extremely xenophobic tone throughout
the election campaign. Attacking all the major parties, he claimed
they had conducted a loud and hysterical debate. It
was the most offensive campaign he had experienced in his thirty
years as a parliamentary deputy, and one which was devoid of any
serious political content, he said. They should be ashamed
of themselves, said Petersen.
In spite of the countrys healthy economic situationhaving
the lowest rate of unemployment in 25 years, a high growth rate
and low inflationthe Social Democrats reacted to pressure
from the international financial markets by enforcing a rigid
austerity policy at the expense of the majority of the population,
thus increasingly alienating their traditional electorate. They
made it possible for the rightwing parties to challenge them on
social policy, luring away many voters with the promise of more
finance for welfare services, health and old age care.
They have also played into the hands of the extreme right,
stirring up xenophobic feelings by attacking immigrants and democratic
rights, policies which benefited the far right in the end.
See Also:
Danish elections overshadowed by the fight
against terrorism
[17 November 2001]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |