The social democrat Mette Frederiksen won Denmark’s 2019 elections on a platform of radical reforms to reach climate targets, lowering the pension age for manual workers – and stricter migration policies.
Denmark has some of the strictest asylum legislation in Europe. The country grants only temporary asylum to refugees, regardless of their need for protection. It has tightened laws on family reunion, and introduced policies focused on prioritizing deportation, rather than integration.
Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen has justified such policies by pitting the challenges of immigration against the affordability of public services and the welfare state.
In her own words, migration “is challenging Europe, affecting people’s lives, and the cohesion of our societies”.
Now, Frederiksen’s approach has become a model for other left-wing governments in Europe, including the UK, struggling to address voter concerns about immigration.
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