National Post ePaper

Scandinavia’s attitudes hardening toward immigrants

Richard orange in Skelleftea, Sweden

Before the Norwegian far-right terrorist Anders Behring Breivik embarked on his gun rampage on the island of Utoya in the summer of 2011, he outlined two goals in his sprawling, incoherent manifesto.

By attacking a Labour party youth camp, he hoped to kill the party’s future leaders and so slow the mass migration of Muslims into Norway he believed the party had engineered as its secret “Eurabia” conspiracy.

And he hoped to provoke an overreaction against the anti-migration right that would force them to follow his path to militancy.

Neither of these things happened.

The new Labour party government whose members were announced last week in the wake of Wednesday’s bow-and-arrow terror attack, contains two ministers who survived Utoya.

In the words of incoming prime minister Jonas Gahr Store, they are “carrying this past with them.”

And rather than being repressed, populist anti-migration parties have thrived across Scandinavia.

Two years after his attack, the populist Progress party, for which Breivik was a youth activist, entered government for the first time and remained as a junior coalition partner in Norway until last year.

The Danish People’s party achieved its best election results in the years after his attack, becoming the second biggest party in parliament, and the populist Sweden Democrats got nearly 18 per cent of the vote in 2018.

Populist success was helped by the refugee wave of 2015, which strengthened public concern over migration, while the parties have also been helped by the failure of integration policies. Sweden, in particular, has suffered a surge in the number of shootings and bomb attacks carried out by firstand second-generation immigrants, with gun homicide rates rising to among the highest in Europe.

There have been sporadic Islamic terror attacks: the Copenhagen shootings of 2015, which claimed two victims, and the Stockholm truck terror attack of 2017, which resulted in five people being killed.

While Scandinavia has come nowhere close to the war of civilizations of Breivik’s diseased fantasy, public attitudes have hardened, with public policy moving in a direction of which Breivik would approve.

Both Denmark and Norway

brought in burka bans in 2018, Denmark in all public places and Norway at schools and universities.

Denmark’s fringe Stram Kurs party even wants Islam banned and all Muslims deported.

In Sweden, both the Democrats and the Moderate party have at a municipal level brought in school burka bans, bans on halal food in schools and even a ban on praying at work.

Rhetoric has toughened, with even Denmark’s Social Democrats rueing the problems caused by “non-western immigration” and seeking to reduce the share of “non-westerners” in all disadvantaged neighbourhoods to just 30 per cent.

Sweden has been the country where anti-immigrant rhetoric and policies have taken the least hold on politics, but there are signs of a shift even there.

Magdalena Andersson, who is likely to become the country’s first female prime minister next month, is pushing to make it much tougher for unskilled workers to migrate to the country, and is increasingly criticizing the problems caused by “large groups, which have come from non-european countries with a weak tradition of education,”

It is hard to foresee exactly how these hardening Scandinavian attitudes toward Islam and migration will be affected by a suspected terror attack carried out by a Muslim convert in Norway. But it is unlikely to make them any more positive.

POPULIST ANTI-MIGRATION PARTIES HAVE THRIVED.

OPINION

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2021-10-18T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-10-18T07:00:00.0000000Z

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