JD Vance
‘had a point’ on migration, Danish socialist prime minister warns EU leaders
For Mette
Frederiksen, controlling “mass migration” is just as important as deterring
Russia.
March 20,
2025 4:01 am CET
By Nicholas
Vinocur
https://www.politico.eu/article/mette-frederiksen-denmark-jd-vance-migration-asylum-refugees/
COPENHAGEN —
There’s not much the socialist Danish prime minister agrees on with the Trump
administration.
For one,
U.S. President Donald Trump has threatened to annex Greenland, an autonomous
Danish dependent territory. He’s also shown a particular desire to side with
Russian President Vladimir Putin when it comes to the country’s invasion of
Ukraine, a sentiment Mette Frederiksen has ardently opposed.
Surprisingly,
though, the center-left Frederiksen told POLITICO in an interview that the
Trump administration’s Vice President JD Vance was right when it comes to
migration and limiting the mass arrival of foreigners.
“I consider
this mass migration into Europe as a threat to the daily life in Europe,” said
the leader of the prosperous European welfare state, echoing what Vance said
weeks earlier at the Munich Security Conference. Frederiksen used mass
migration interchangeably with irregular migration during the interview.
“There is
nothing more urgent than mass migration,” Vance told a partly shocked audience
of Europeans Feb. 14, saying the threat was bigger than Russia. Frederiksen,
who was in the audience when Vance gave his speech that day, said she
“unfortunately” disagreed with him on Russia. She described Russia as the No. 1
threat facing Europe.
Still, he
had a point on migration, she conceded.
The
center-left politician stands out in a sea of conservatives in Europe as one of
the only socialist leaders remaining in power across the bloc, in large part
due to her severe policies on migration. Elected in 2019, she doubled down on a
wholesale turnaround of Denmark’s immigration policy, which moved from openness
to one of the strictest migration policies in Europe, if not the world.
But while
Danish voters have embraced her tough stance on accepting foreign nationals,
human rights organizations and refugee advocates have accused the government of
“racism” and “discrimination.”
Conservative
leaders across Europe, from Austria and Hungary to Germany and the Netherlands,
have embraced similar viewpoints on migration with relative success while the
popularity of Frederiksen’s socialist counterparts has waned. Outgoing German
Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez have pulled the
other way when it comes to immigration, arguing against hardline policies at
the EU level.
Scholz was
voted out of office though he hardened his stance on asylum seekers weeks ahead
of the Feb. 23 German election.
“The message
that our populations in almost all European countries have tried to send to
politicians through the years: Please get in control [of] our borders and be
decisive on migration,” Frederiksen said.
‘Zero
asylum’
Frederiksen,
like Trump, has found that her voter base embraces her stance on migration.
To limit
migration, Denmark has deployed a potent cocktail of policies dubbed “zero”
refugees including negative advertising in source countries urging migrants not
to make the trip; confiscating valuables from migrants to offset the cost of
their stay; threatening rapid deportations for settled Syrians during the reign
of Bashar Assad; and the controversial “No Ghetto” laws aimed at reducing the
proportion of foreign-born people in Danish neighborhoods. The country also
passed a law in 2021 that could allow refugees to be moved to centers in
partner countries outside the EU, such as Rwanda, a proposal that the European
Commission later criticized.
Frederiksen
isn’t responsible for all of these laws — some of which were introduced before
she rose to power — but she has kept the direction of travel steady.
Dating back
to his first term, Trump built his core support with “build the wall” chants at
campaign rallies, promising to send back the hordes of migrants he claimed
crossed over the border from Mexico daily. In recent days, Trump ignored a
judge’s order while sending a plane of Venezuelan nationals to a third country,
El Salvador.
In office
and on the campaign trail, Trump said repeatedly that migrants have taken jobs
away from Americans.
“No matter
if you look at statistics on crimes or if you look at problems on the labor
market, insecurity in local communities, it is the most vulnerable who
experience the consequences” of uncontrolled migration, Frederiksen said.
Frederiksen
attributes her party’s success with voters to her migration stance, which Vance
also alluded to in Munch.
“No voter on
this continent went to the ballot box to open the floodgates to millions of
unvetted immigrants. But you know what they did vote for? In England, they
voted for Brexit. And agree or disagree, they voted for it. And more and more,
all over Europe, they’re voting for political leaders who promise to put an end
to out-of-control migration,” Vance said.
Still,
Frederiksen has embraced staunchly socialist ideology when it comes to
championing blue-collar workers, expanding access to abortion and protecting
housing rights for tenants. Her immigration policies have kept the far right at
bay and the percentage of immigrants in Denmark lower than other European
countries such as Germany or Sweden.
The result
has been a precipitous drop in asylum seekers between 2019 and 2024, when
Denmark approved a total of 864 asylum claims.
“I totally
believe in equal opportunities and a Scandinavian welfare model with a tax-paid
education, social benefits and health care. But for me that’s only one
traditional pillar of being a social democrat,” she argued.
“Being in
control of migration is the second pillar.”
‘Do you feel
safe where you live?’
Still,
Copenhagen’s hardcore approach has stirred up plenty of controversy. Rivals
have accused Frederiksen of co-opting far-right policies to win power and of
riding roughshod over the dignity of migrants. Some of Denmark’s policies, like
the law mandating the confiscation of valuables from arriving migrants, have
drawn criticism from the United Nations. The “No Ghetto” law was found, just
last month, of being “directly discriminatory on the basis of ethnic origin” by
an adviser to the EU’s top court.
But
exceptions remain. When Denmark took in Ukrainian refugees after Russia’s
full-scale invasion in February 2022, the country’s parliament voted to amend
the law to exempt those nationals from the restrictions on other migrants.
Critics have
noted that similar policies would not work in larger, less homogenous EU
countries such as Spain or France, which have much bigger immigrant populations
going back generations linked to their colonial histories.
What’s more,
Denmark has carve-outs from Europe’s justice and home affairs treaty, which
grants Copenhagen wide latitude to enact policies that might be illegal
elsewhere.
Indeed,
while Denmark is something of an outlier in the EU, its officials have been
driving a recent reappraisal of the bloc’s entire approach to migration.
After the EU
adopted a new Migration and Asylum Pact in 2024, Denmark quietly led a group of
20 nations to propose further revisions to the way Europe handles asylum
requests and deportations, according to two EU diplomats.
This effort
fed into a new “Directive on returns,” published earlier this month by the
European Commission, that gives states legal guidance on how they can speed up
deportations to third countries or third states where migrants were previously
employed, similar to the law Denmark passed in 2021 to allow the country to
move refugees to Rwanda.
The bloc is
also shelling out billions of euros to keep migrants from reaching its shores.
Last year, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen inked a €7
billion deal with Egypt to boost development and deter irregular migration. The
EU has also rushed to restore diplomatic ties with Syria, where it hopes to
start returning more migrants after the fall of Assad despite recent outbreaks
of sectarian violence.
“Of course
we are all looking at what is going on in Syria. It’s not a political choice
whether a country is safe or not. We have authorities looking into that,” she
said.
For
Frederiksen, such outlays don’t clash with Europe’s other big focus — defense.
Instead, they’re all part of the same effort to make Europe more secure for its
citizens.
“If I ask
people about security and their security concerns, many of them will reply that
Russia and defending Europe is top of mind right now. But security is also
about what is going on in your local community,” Frederiksen said.
“Do you feel
safe where you live? When you go and take your local train, or when your kids
are going home from school, or whatever is going on in your daily life?”
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