Denmark
Leads the West to Immigration Sanity
October 28,
2022 Daniel Pipes The National Interest
Winfield
Myers
https://www.meforum.org/denmark-leads-the-west-to-immigration-sanity
Danish
Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen overhauled the Social Democrat’s lax
immigration policy, calling for a cap on “non-Western immigrants,” for illegal
migrants to be expelled to North Africa, and for immigrants to have to be
employed for a full work-week of thirty-seven hours.
Today in the
West, no issue matters more than immigration policy, especially at a time when
much of the world, from Mexicans to Nigerians to Pakistanis, wants to move to
North America and Western Europe.
Controlling
immigration has proven difficult because the Establishment in destination
countries tends to view mass, unfettered, and unvetted immigration as a benign
phenomenon. Two examples capture this outlook. In 2014, Sweden’s establishment
parties, making up 86 percent of the parliament, joined forces to marginalize
the civilizationist party (that is, the party focused on controlling
immigration and demanding the integration of immigrants) with 14 percent.
Angela Merkel, the establishment German chancellor waved in a million-plus
unvetted migrants, leading to a pan-European crisis in 2015-16.
Few parties
are so arch-establishment as Denmark’s Social Democrats (SD). Founded in 1871,
it had the largest representation in parliament for seventy-seven straight
years. Its accomplishments include creating the welfare state, building modern
Denmark, and shaping the Danish character. “Deep down, we’re all Social
Democrats” a person who dislikes the party acknowledged to me.
Despite this
pedigree, plus its own history of advocating open borders, the SD has since
2019 imposed a remarkably restrictive immigration policy. In so doing, it has
made Denmark the West’s undisputed leader in the race to save traditional
culture. As few outside Denmark have noticed this remarkable shift, I went to
Copenhagen in advance of the national elections on November 1 to understand
what caused this shift, how much of a difference it makes, and if Denmark can
offer lessons to other countries.
Building to
Crisis
Denmark’s
unusual path started in 2001, when SD’s seventy-seven-year streak came to an
end and it lost power due to widespread stress over uncontrolled immigration,
especially coming from the Middle East. Then, in 2006, a depiction of Islam’s
Prophet Muhammad in a Danish newspaper cartoon spurred international protests
in the Muslim world. The controversy was Denmark’s largest foreign relations
controversy in decades. In 2015, the SD fared badly again, also due largely to
the many Middle Eastern immigrants.
In response,
the party chose a thirty-seven-year-old woman, Mette Frederiksen, as its
leader. She quickly overhauled SD’s lax immigration policy, calling for a cap
on “non-Western immigrants,”[1] for illegal migrants to be expelled to North
Africa, and for immigrants to have to be employed for a full work-week of
thirty-seven hours. Her party supported a law allowing jewelry to be stripped
from migrants as well as a ban on burqas and niqabs, the all-encompassing
Islamic outfits.
This
jaw-droppingly tough approach by a social democratic party paid off handsomely.
SD and its allies prevailed in the 2019 elections and Frederiksen went on to
become prime minister. In contrast, the anti-immigration Danish People’s Party
(DPP) did terribly, collapsing from 37 seats in 2015 to 16 seats in 2019.
Policies
Frederiksen
spoke of “sticking to our Danish values” and took steps to control immigration.
Denmark accepted 21,316 asylum seekers in 2015; that number dropped to 1,515 in
2020. She announced the goal of zero asylum seekers in 2021, though the actual
number increased to 2,099, presumably due to the decrease of pandemic
restrictions. Likewise, the number of asylums granted went from 19,849 in 2015
to 601 in 2020, to 1,362 in 2021. In comparative terms, these numbers are
trivial compared to many other Western European countries; neighboring Sweden
granted 17,215 asylums in 2020, or roughly 15 times more than Denmark on a
per-capita basis.
Even before
Frederiksen took office, the Danish authorities had sent out a flamboyantly
unfriendly message to would-be immigration. In 2015, to surprised international
headlines, the government placed advertisements in four Lebanese newspapers
announcing that regulations concerning refugees had been tightened; in other
words, go somewhere else. SD then engaged in a number of high-profile steps to
encourage repatriation and even engage in forced deportations. For example,
those the government delicately calls “spontaneous asylum-seekers” (i.e.,
illegal migrants) who refuse repatriation may find themselves in one of the
country’s three “return centers.” Inger Støjberg, integration minister in 2018,
growled that conditions at those centers must be “as intolerable as possible.”
The numbers
involved were small and hardly dented the problem, the legal wrangling long and
expensive, but these deportations – plus the ads, the jewelry law, and other
steps – reinforced the Danish snarl to illegal migrants: “Don’t come to
Denmark. We’re nasty. Go to Germany or Sweden instead.” As a result, more
refugees left Denmark in 2020 than arrived.
At the same
time, SD barely broached the far more challenging problem of dealing with the
profound issues related to Muslim and other immigrants who come from alien
cultures, far less modern circumstances, and bear an Islamist outlook. Social
pathologies, unemployment, cultural clashes, and “parallel societies” remain
for future governments to contend with.
A Serious
Effort?
Did
Denmark’s Social Democratic party merely pander or is it sincere? To assess, it
helps to take a step back and consider how divergently establishment and
civilizationist parties view immigration.
Establishment
parties welcome large-scale immigration because they tend to care little for
their own culture, which they often associate with fascism, imperialism, and
racism. They feel a sense of guilt toward non-Western peoples, whom they see as
exploited by the West and made poorer and more repressed due to Western greed.
A visitor to Denmark’s National Museum will learn that Danish ships transported
about 110,000 slaves from Africa to the Western Hemisphere. The Establishment
welcomes diversity and cultural transformation. It points to immigrants as
sympathetic refugees and as aspiring young scholars, successful entrepreneurs,
and proud members of the armed forces.
Attached to
their own language, customs, religion, and to the cultural familiarity of those
around them, civilizationists wish to preserve their traditional way of life.
By contrast,
attached to their own language, customs, religion, and to the cultural
familiarity of those around them, civilizationists wish to preserve their
traditional way of life. Symbolic of this, they cherish how pedestrians in
Denmark wait dutifully for the light to turn green, even when no car is
remotely in sight. Or how the public transportation works on the honor system.
When large numbers of people speak other languages, pursue other customs,
follow other religions, and act differently from themselves (I compulsively
jay-walk), civilizationists become offended, even scared. They point to the
myriad problems with Middle Eastern immigration, such as polygyny, female
genital mutilation, honor killings, criminality, rape gangs, jihadi violence,
new diseases, resisting assimilation, unemployment.
Two forces,
however, disrupt establishment cohesion on immigration. One concerns indigenous
workers who lose out when waves of low-cost immigrant rivals compete with them,
harming their welfare; this makes far-left figures like U.S. senator Bernie
Sanders (D-VT), British MP Jeremy Corbyn, and French presidential contender
Jean-Luc Mélenchon cautious about waves of migrants. Interestingly, Frederiksen
also articulated this position: “The price of unregulated globalization, mass
immigration and the free movement of labor is paid for by the lower classes.”
The other
disruptive force concerns the voters; if open borders lose votes, then the
establishment must rethink its approach – what happened in Denmark between 2001
and 2015. Together, these two forces suggest to me that the SD is sincere,
though that will be tested should it lose the forthcoming elections.
The Current
Debate
A sterile
good-bad dispute over uncontrolled immigration wracks every other Western
country. Denmark alone hosts a constructive debate over tactics: how far to
clamp down? Being a member of the European Union (EU) and signatory to many
United Nations (UN) conventions regarding asylum, family reunification, human
rights, refugees, statelessness, about 80 percent of relevant Danish laws
derive from those two sources. The issue, therefore, has less to do with
abstract preferences and more with a willingness to defy those higher
authorities.
The SD
maintains that Denmark, a law-abiding global citizen with a population of just
5.8 million, must work strictly within existing confines. “We’re a small
country, we can’t do whatever we want,” , told me.
In response,
Morten Messerschmidt, the equally impressive DPP leader, retorted that SD’s
foundational principles require it meekly to follow EU and UN diktats. Instead,
he wants to push the envelope, ignoring select EU laws and leaving UN
conventions. Not to do so, Messerschmidt believes, means electorally-appealing
tough rhetoric without real effect.
That’s the
essence of the argument in Denmark, a sensible one, with a plausible case for
each side. The voters will decide how aggressive they wish to be.
Why Denmark
Why, I asked
my Danish interlocutors, did Denmark break the mold on immigration policy,
ahead of every other Western country in developing a sensible consensus between
establishment and civilizationists? I received an interesting array of answers.
A sampling:
The most
persuasive explanation came from , a Norwegian writer, and Bent Blüdnikow, a
journalist and historian. With Pia Kjærsgaard (b. 1947), Denmark had the right
charismatic politician at the right time with the right message. She built the
DPP into a non-scary, non-extremist force that, starting in 2001, won
substantial backing and forced the SD seriously to respond to her critique.
In other
words, Denmark’s happy evolution resulted not from national character nor from
profound historical developments but from the randomness of personality and
moment. That in turn implies the near-impossibility of predicting which Western
country might follow Denmark toward immigration sanity.
External
Impact
Observers
widely recognize that Danes broke new ground. Political analyst Kristian Madsen
saw the 2019 elections as “a laboratory for what the center-left [in Europe]
can be.” Analyst Jamie Dettmer noted that Frederiksen’s victory “prompted a
debate among fellow European left-wing parties: Should they, too, adopt
anti-migrant rhetoric, imitate their Danish counterparts and campaign for
stricter immigration rules?” Frederiksen herself offered Denmark’s
tough-on-immigration approach to other Social Democratic parties. “For years,”
she admonished them, Social Democrats “have underestimated the challenges of
mass immigration. ... We have failed when it comes to maintaining the social
contract, which is the very foundation of the Social-Democratic social model.”
But there
has not been much response. On their own, Austria’s leftists made small moves
in this direction when Christian Kern, its Social Democratic chancellor in
2016-17, tightened immigration rules. Sweden’s Social Democrats talked vaguely
of pushing harder for immigrants to integrate, with Prime Minister Magdalena
Andersson arguing “We don’t want a Somalitown ... we want Swedish to be the
natural language throughout Sweden”).
In the end,
then, it will not so much be the Danish model that brings sense to Europe but
autonomous developments in each country. Denmark’s example can inspire but it
does not smooth the path forward.
Daniel Pipes
is president of the Middle East Forum.
[ Curiously,
the Danish government defines non-Western as any country outside the European
Union, with the exception of several west Europe countries (Iceland, Norway,
Switzerland, United Kingdom), several west European mini-states (Andorra,
Liechtenstein, Monaco, San Marino, Vatican), and the Anglosphere (Australia,
Canada, New Zealand, United States). This measure renders Ukraine, Israel,
Japan, and Chile non-Western but Cypriot Turks and French Algerians rate as
Westerners.
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