Stram Kurs

Background

As large number of refugees worked their way from Asia and Africa in the European migrant crisisFile:Wikipedia's W.svg in 2015, Denmark placed border guards at German and Swedish crossing points, in the anticipation that Denmark might become overrun with asylum seekers wanting to immigrate. That turned out not to be the case, and the waste of police resources was criticized.[3]

Nevertheless, this period marked a sea change in Scandinavians' previously welcoming attitude towards asylum-seekers.[4] Some Danes became pessimistic that their nation might face integration problems akin to those which media claimed existed across the Ørefrsund in Malmö, Sweden.[5] Less charitably and more bluntly, this could be called Islamophobia. (In Norway, such anxiety is often couched as fear of svenske tilstander, "Swedish conditions.")[6] Many of the perceived difficulties of integration in Sweden, however, were greatly exaggerated by local media figures, and especially by fringe figures such as Ingrid Carlqvist.

While the reasons were questionable, the right-leaning Danish coalition government of the time became staunchly opposed to immigration, and alongside the use of police at the border, implemented a plan to convert an uninhabited island into a concentration camp housing camp for disqualified asylum seekers that would, in essence, demoralize them to the point where they would want to leave the country of their own accord.[7] The government, who depended on the Danish People's Party for the balance of power, also committed itself to legislating a ban on wearing burkas in public in 2017.[8]

While some less extremist governments have made such as case from the perspective of secularism, such as France, and some feminist thinkers have been outspoken against burqas, this was largely seen as an unwarranted attack on a religious minority.

Stram Kurs thus capitalized on a general rightward swing and marginal but growing populism and nationalism in Europe generally and in Denmark in particular, fed by scare stories from media outlets. Paludan used increased anti-Muslim rhetoric in the wake of the 2015 Charlie Hebdo attacks and subsequent 2015 Copenhagen shootingsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg, and waxing xenophobia in its allied countries (e.g. Trump, Farage). Paludan was a fringe figure who came to prominence through YouTube videos where he coarsely insults Islam, Muslims, and the Qur'an, and was previously a lawyer whose career largely involved defending people on drug charges. While he pitched his position as a clash of ideals between Islam and nominally Lutheran but largely secular[9] ethnic Danes, Breivik, to the north, made similar claims about Norway.

From shitposting to political party

Stram Kurs, which is even more reactionary than the Danish People's Party, received the necessary minimum number of signatures to be certified as a party (20,109),[10] and ran candidates in the June 2019 elections to the Folketing (Parliament).[2] One of the signatories said in an interview that he didn't agree with Hard Line's agenda so much as he was impressed by Paludan "having a backbone."[11]

While Hard Line is generally viewed as a single-issue protest party, the multi-party system in Denmark means coalition governments are inevitable, and parties jockey constantly to poach from each other's voting base, often by stealing key platform issues. Shortly before the June 2019 election, the leader of the largest left-leaning party, the Social Democrats' Mette Frederiksen,File:Wikipedia's W.svg stood to inherit the mantle of prime minister from Lars Løkke RasmussenFile:Wikipedia's W.svg after she rather abruptly combined anti-immigration measures with the party's usual center-left economic program and social liberalism.[12] This both led to an exodus of People's Party supporters, and could have been viewed as a victory for Hard Line's agenda.

A somewhat damp squib

Contrary to the hopes/fears based on early opinion polls, Stram Kurs failed to cross the 2% electoral threshold in the Danish general election on June 5th, 2019, garnering only 1.8% of the ballots cast.[13] By contrast, the other party challenging the Danish People's Party for the mantle of “most right wing party in the Danish parliament”, New Right, did slightly better at 2.4% of the vote, while the DPP itself collapsed from its 21.1% high watermark in 2015 to no more than 8.7%. However, despite not passing the electoral threshold, Stram Kurs can still look forward to an annual sum of about 2 million DKK (around $300,000 USD or €270,000) in grants from the state, due to the Danish system of public financing of political parties based on their performance in the most recent general election.[14]

gollark: You would need to release the other stuff which is being hashed *before* pulling down something from that.
gollark: Perhaps.
gollark: Probably easier than dealing with youtube stream formats.
gollark: I meant text, not images, but I suppose you could just download a specific size.
gollark: You could pull from arbitrary active Twitter accounts.

See also

References

  1. Stram Kurs website, accessed May 11th, 2019
  2. Boffey, Daniel. "Danish far-right party calling for Muslim deportation to stand in election," The Guardian, May 5th, 2019. Accessed May 15th, 2019.
  3. Rychia, Lucie. "Danish temporary border controls using up enormous police resources," The Copenhagen Post, October 4th, 2016. Accessed May 16th, 2019.
  4. Jensen, Carsten. Kældermennesker. Copenhagen: Politikens Forlag, 2018.
  5. Nissen, Maya. »PORTRÆT: Malmø rystes af drab og dårlig integration« ("PORTRAIT: Malmö shaken by murders and poor integration"), Danmarks Radio (Danish Broadcasting Corporation), January 13th, 2017. Accessed May 15th, 2019.
  6. Skartveit, Hanne. «Svenske tilstander - og norske» ("Swedish conditions - and Norwegian ones"), Verdens Gang, January 27th, 2018. Accessed May 16th, 2019.
  7. Olsen, Jan M. "Denmark plans to send rejected asylum seekers to remote island." Global News, December 4th, 2018. Accessed May 16th, 2019.
  8. Kristiansen, Cecilie Lund, and Skærbæk, Morton. »Venstre har bestemt sig: Sikrer flertal for et burkaforbud« ("Venstre has made up their mind: Ensure a majority for a burka ban"), Politiken, October 6th, 2017. Accessed June 30th, 2019.
  9. Sriram, Sharanya. "Religion in Denmark" (blog post), Berkley Center, Georgetown University, December 11th, 2015. Accessed July 10th, 2019.
  10. »Hvordan danner jeg et nyt parti?« ("How do I form a new party?"), Økonomi og Indenrigsministeriet (Ministry of Economic and Internal Affairs), Accessed May 16th, 2019.
  11. Harder, Thomas. »Stram Kurs brager frem: 604 vælgererklæringer på et døgn« ("Hard Line surges forward: 604 signatories in a 24-hour period"), Ekstra Bladet, April 7th, 2019. Accessed May 16th, 2019.
  12. Orange, Richard. "Mette Frederiksen: the anti-immigration left leader set to win power in Denmark," The Guardian, May 11th, 2019. Accessed May 15th, 2019.
  13. Resultater (Results - of the Danish general election), the Danish Broadcasting Corporation, June 6th, 2019
  14. Stram Kurs får ingen plads i Folketinget - men millioner i partistøtte (Stram Kurs gets no seats in the Parliament - but millions in party funding,) Lars Lindevall, the Danish Broadcasting Corporation, June 6th, 2019
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