Denmark’s tough stance on migrants plays well at
home. In Brussels, it could be a different story.
Mette Frederiksen must convince her European Social
Democrats colleagues her domestic track record is a good fit for a top job in
Brussels.
The "ghetto policies," which Prime Minister
Mette Frederiksen has persisted with after taking power in 2019, have radically
changed areas like Mjølnerparken. |
THE ROAD TO
THE EU ELECTION 2024
APRIL 12,
2024 4:00 AM CET
BY CHARLIE
DUXBURY
https://www.politico.eu/article/denmark-migration-eu-parliament-election-mette-frederiksen/
POLITICO’s
reporters are speaking to voters to find out what will convince them to head to
the ballot box (or not) in the European election in June.
COPENHAGEN
— In Vanløse community center one Friday night in April, 30 local residents
gathered to grill three candidates for June’s European election.
Fueled by
hummus sandwiches and mugs of strong coffee, the crowd was lively.
One
resident, an older man with a mustache, was concerned about Hungary undermining
the rule of law in the EU, in particular. He jabbed a table with his downturned
index finger as he called for an end to corruption within the European Union
institutions. Another man, this one younger and with a Social Democrat badge
pinned to his sweater, stood up and
called on the EU to do more to rein in the social media giants he said were
blighting young lives.
As the
meeting attendees prepared to head out in the April rain, local voter Betty
Dederding, a retired railway worker, ran through her key issues ahead of the
European election. Europe needed to unite in the face of Russia and China to
prevent Moscow and Beijing dominating and creating a new world order, she said.
Before the
residents dispersed, when the issue of migration policy arose, a consensus
spread among the assembled that Denmark’s long standing tough stance was still
the right way to go — and Europe would do well to follow.
Social
Democrat MEP candidate Christel Schaldemose, one of the trio of candidates,
agreed.
“I do
believe that migration will be a hot topic not just now but also in the coming
years,” he said.
Denmark —
under Social Democrat Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen and her center-right
predecessor Lars Løkke Rasmussen — has pursued some of the toughest immigration
policies in Europe over recent years. Denmark’s policies were initially seen as
extreme in countries such as the United Kingdom, Sweden and Germany but over
recent years lawmakers in those states appear to have moved closer to
Copenhagen’s line, and to some extent, followed
its example.
In the last
decade, Denmark has integrated an increasingly harsh stance on immigration. In
2023, Denmark revoked residency permits for Syria refugees, declaring some
parts of the war-torn country safe for return, before backtracking after
international backlash. In 2021, the country passed a law that could allow
refugees arriving in Denmark to be moved to asylum centers in partner
countries, such as Rwanda, a proposal which the European Commission criticized.
It also looked hard at detaining asylum seekers on a remote island.
In the
coffee shop outside the community center, Emilie Høj, a 23-year-old local
resident working behind the counter said she thought Frederiksen had been a
good prime minister and immigration and integration policies were not something
that now worried her as a voter.
“Being
prime minister is a hard job, but I think she’s doing pretty well,” Høj said.
That such
policies passed without dissent at the community center in Vanløse underlined
how they have been accepted by many lawmakers and voters.
The three
candidates for European Parliament — Christel Schaldemose of the Social
Democrats, Anders Vistisen of the far-right Danish People’s Party and Villy
Søvndal of Green Left — agreed with the crowd.
“Only a few
years ago, mentioning immigration would have led to a big discussion,” said
Schaldemose, who is Frederiksen’s top pick.
“It is now
as if there is a common understanding on this important issue. There is a
consensus behind what we are doing in Denmark.”
Frederiksen’s challenge
Frederiksen’s
resolute support for Ukraine has won plaudits at home and abroad and she was
seen as a largely effective operator during the COVID pandemic. Her name was
previously raised as a potential head of NATO and latterly as a strong
candidate to take over one of the top jobs in one of the European Union
institutions, the European Council presidency.
The latest
opinion polling for the European election looks good for Frederiksen. Her
Social Democrats are leading with 24 percent, equating to four projected seats
(of 15) in the European Parliament and a gain of one seat from 2019.
In recent
interviews, Frederiksen has declined to say whether she wants the European
Council presidency, leaving the door open for her potential candidacy.
But
Frederiksen’s domestically popular tough immigration stance could prove to be a
weakness with some of her European Social Democrat colleagues whose support she
needs. Social Democrats in Europe — in countries like Sweden — have
traditionally favored a more open border regime and been reluctant to pursue
policy which would see more asylum seekers detained at the EU’s outer edge or
held in detention centers within EU states.
At the same
time, it could help Frederiksen get backing from other parties for other top
jobs as the EU’s migration policy has generally shifted toward politically
right-leaning policies like Denmark .
”I think
she will have a lot of traction with leaders like Hungary’s Viktor Orban,
Italy’s Giorgia Meloni and others who are tough on immigration,” said Marlene
Wind, a political scientist at the University of Copenhagen. “But among the
Social Democrats in Europe she might have some challenges.”
Frederiksen’s
predecessor, Rasmussen, introduced nearly two dozen “ghetto laws,” classifying
more than two dozen immigrant-heavy communities as “ghettos.” Children born to
immigrants would be forced to assimilate into Danish society through mandated
25 hours of separation from their parents. One of these laws mandates forced
integration of thousands of residents in these two dozen neighborhoods by
demolishing housing blocks. Frederiksen has not only embraced these laws, she
has pushed them forward.
But there
are contradictions. When Denmark took in Ukrainian refugees after Russia’s
full-scale invasion in 2022, its parliament voted to amend the law to exempt
Ukrainians from restrictions it places on other migrants.
Vanløse,
dotted with apartment blocks, small houses, a new shopping mall and a train
station that zips residents into the city, has not been identified as one of
those communities.
Local and
international critics of Denmark’s migrant-focused legislation have often been
biting. At the recent Party of European Socialists conference in Rome, leftist
big shots Pedro Sanchez of Spain and Antonio Costa of Portugal seemed to get a
much warmer reception from the crowd, according to reporters present. She
received applause but they were muted. When she stopped speaking there were
noticeably fewer cheers than after Sanchez.
‘They are unwanted in Denmark, and they must feel
that’
In 2018,
then immigration minister Inger Støjberg launched the idea of moving a
subsection of failed asylum seekers —who had committed crimes for example — to
a tiny isolated island off Copenhagen.
“They are
unwanted in Denmark, and they must feel that,” Stojberg wrote in a social media
post.
The “ghetto
policies,” which Prime Minister Frederiksen has persisted with after taking
power at an election in 2019, have radically changed areas like Mjølnerparken,
just east of Vanløse.
Visited on
a recent weekday, many of the blocks were shrouded in scaffolding and plastic
as an army of workers revamped decades-old housing stock. The noise of stone
cutting machines merged with the sound of skateboard wheels and toddlers’
shouts in an adjacent park.
Old
furniture was piled close to the entrance of one of the buildings where long
standing residents have been moved out. The building will be upgraded and
higher rents changed to new tenants, shifting the economic mix of the area. The
government says this will improve the outlook for residents, by among other
things, reducing crime.
“For the
people who lived here for a long time and had to move, this destroyed a lot of
memories,” said Camellia Thorsson, a 24-year-old health care worker and local
resident who was out with her nine-month-old baby in the park.
While the
neighborhood had changed, she felt the spirit had survived the changes.
Thorrson still loved the area. She gives
the example of her parents in law who had to move. They didn’t have to move far
but they faced uncertainty over when the move would happen and they got one
room fewer than they expected. They also now have to pay a higher rent.
But she
added that if the government’s “ghetto laws” reduced criminality then the
short-term disruption would be worth it.
“When you
have a child, you want to live in a peaceful area,” she said.
Dederding,
the retired railway worker in the community hall agreed with Thorsson and
Social Democrat MEP candidate Schaldemose, who she said was right to highlight
migration as a key issue in the months ahead.
The EU and
Denmark needed to seek firm control of their own borders and also support
investment in struggling economies in areas like North Africa where climate
change was placing increasing pressure on local populations, she said.
“Climate
change of course will move many people around the world,” she said. “We need to
ensure they have something to live off in their own countries,” she said.

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