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WSWS : News
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Right-wing politics dominate Danish Euro referendum
By Steve James
20 September 2000
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On September 28 Denmark votes on whether to abolish its currency,
the krone, in favour of the euro currently used by 12 European
countries.
Since the referendum was announced opinion polls have narrowly
moved against the government's position in favour of adopting
the euro. The latest poll suggests that 44 percent will vote against
adoption and 40 percent in favour.
A Danish rejection of the euro would have implications for
the currency itself, as it would strengthen forces across Europe,
especially in Sweden and Britain, calling for a halt to European
integration.
The European Union (EU) has devoted considerable political
energies to securing a yes vote. The EU's recent decision to lift
sanctions against Austriaimposed following the entry of
Jorg Haider's right-wing Freedom Party into governmentwas
partly in response to Danish criticisms that the measures constituted
unwarranted interference in an EU member's internal affairs. Danish
opposition to the sanctions was supported by Portugal and the
other Scandinavian EU members, particularly Finland.
Denmark has a history of volatile voting on European integration
in which anti-government protest has been corralled behind opposition
to the EU. Most famously, in 1992 the Folketing (parliament) accepted
the Maastricht Treaty, proposing further European integration,
but it was narrowly rejected in a referendum. The vote precipitated
a political crisis in Europe, and was a factor in destabilising
the Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) that tied most European currencies
to each other. Subsequent global speculation forced the British
and Italian currencies out of the ERM and other countries to devalue.
The Danish government negotiated opt-outs from Maastricht on
defence and euro membership and won a referendum on entry to the
EU in 1993. The result was greeted by protests in Copenhagen,
with police shooting at demonstrators for the first time since
1945. An anti-EU movement, the June movement, was named after
the 1992 vote.
Denmark joined the Schengen Treatyallowing unrestricted
passage between those countries who signed upin 1996 and
in 1998, the Amsterdam Treaty, in part designed to be as favourable
to Danish interests and national sensitivities as the 1993 opt-out
arrangement, was voted on and accepted. The 1998 vote, however,
was dominated by the issue of immigration, with anti-EU forces
presenting entry into Schengen's provisions for relaxing internal
borders as an invitation to workers from all over Europe to move
to Denmark.
In 1999 sections of business and the trade unions began a campaign
calling for entry into the euro. Early this year, the ruling Social
Democratic Party (Socialdemokratiet-SPD ) in
a coalition with the small Radical Party, announced its intention
to hold another referendum on euro membership.
At the time the government was confident it would win the referendum.
Most of Danish trade and investment is already within Europe and
the economy is booming. The ability of the SPD and trade unions
to restrict workers to low pay increases, combined with the lower
price of the krone, already closely tied to the euro via a variant
of the ERM, has allowed the government to halve the national debt
and announce its intention of paying it off entirely by 2005.
Exports are also growing and international stock market earnings
are at record levels. The SPD issued a report Denmark in
Europe warning of much higher interest rates in the event
of a no vote, as the country would be exposed to the turbulence
of the international money markets.
Explaining why Denmark has to adopt the euro, Anders Panum
Jensen of the Danish European Movement said, Outside the
euro we lose influence on economic issues, especially in the euro
zone. How much will other politicians pay attention to Danish
arguments when we are not part of the core group?
The campaign has not gone according to plan. The Danish government
is becoming increasingly alarmed in the face of criticism from
the leading anti-euro partiesthe extreme right wing Danish
Peoples Party (DPP), and the former Stalinists of the Socialist
Peoples Party (SPP). Using populist demagogy both organisations
have accused the government of betraying Danish national interests,
undermining the welfare state, and opening the door to immigrants.
The DPP, led by Pia Kjærsgaard, pointedly opened its
No campaign on the 60th anniversary of the German
invasion of Denmark. It compares the euro to Hitler's Reichsmark.
The DPP won 7.9 percent of the 1998 Folketing elections and has
13 seats. DPP board member Carl Christian Ebbesen said, 'We don't
look at it as an economic project. We are fighting to keep the
krone and to keep the values of Danish society. By that we mean
keeping control of Danish society in Danish hands.
Holger K. Nielsen leads the SPP, which also have 13 seats in
the Folketing. Something of a TV personality it was Nielson who,
in the aftermath of the 1992 defeat, negotiated the Danish opt-outs.
The SPP was formed in 1959 as a split from the Danish Communist
Party, partly in response to the suppression of the Hungarian
uprising in 1956. From the beginning, however, the party's break
with Moscow was based on a nationalist program that saw it move
politically closer to Danish capitalism. It sought to influence
the SPD and the Folketing, while taking a formally neutral position
on the Cold War. In the early 1970s the SPP embraced environmentalismopposing
both nuclear power and economic growthand developed its
opposition to European integration. After 1992, following Nielson's
elevation into a part-time diplomat, the SPP determined to become
more engaged in the EU as a 'political battlefield' than
in getting Denmark out of the EU. The latter demand was
dropped from the party's manifesto in 1999. The SPP's main concern
is to preserve Denmark's opt-outs.
Nielson told the Copenhagen Post that the consequences
of joining the euro would be Primarily a quite unacceptable
burden on our welfare system. And then the conditions prevailing
in our employment market would be fundamentally changed, as we
would no longer be able to maintain a system wherein those directly
involved could negotiate their own solutionsrather than
have them dictated from abroad.
On rejecting the euro and defending Danish self determination,
Nielson claimed that, A decisive Danish 'No' will be followed
by one from Sweden, and then one from England. Subsequently, the
EU will be forced to recognize that member states have the right
to flexibility and self-determination.
The SPP echo the chauvinist claim of the DPP that European
integration will lead to a flood of immigrants taking Danish jobs
and so undermine the welfare state.
The Danish government also presents its support for euro membership
as an example of its own aggressive defence of national interests.
Last week, on the initiative of the metal workers union, the
SPD, Conservative and Liberal parties launched a joint campaign
insisting that the euro would not result in pensions being cut.
In reality, this is one of the major areas that would have to
be cut to make the euro a success. Commenting on the euro's current
weakness, the Financial Times said, Why has the euro
been so weak? At one level it suffers from political contradictions.
The electors of the euro-zone generally want cosy, high-spending
welfare states. But Europe's professional investors and corporate
bosses want to buy their way into the more bracing US industrial
culture.
See Also:
Danish Social Democrats vote
for entry into European single currency
[24 May 2000]
The euro's launch
heralds major economic and social conflicts
[21 January 1999]
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