Danish People’s Party Leader Demands Border Shutdown After Election Victory

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
June 19, 2015

Disgruntled Muslim protesters gather on City Hall Square in Copenhagen, Denmark Saturday Feb. 4, 2006. Denmark, a small country that prides itself on extensive humanitarian work and that usually gets only cursory media attention suddenly finds itself denounced as evil for publishing 12 cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad. Muslims in Denmark _ some 200,000 of the country's 5.4 million people _ complain of being discriminated against and being denied jobs.  (AP Photo/John McConnico)
Disgruntled Muslim protesters gather on City Hall Square in Copenhagen, Denmark Saturday Feb. 4, 2006. Denmark, a small country that prides itself on extensive humanitarian work and that usually gets only cursory media attention suddenly finds itself denounced as evil for publishing 12 cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad. Muslims in Denmark _ some 200,000 of the country’s 5.4 million people _ complain of being discriminated against and being denied jobs. (AP Photo/John McConnico)

The Danish People’s Party just finished second place in Denmark’s elections, and they are vowing to block the human refuse being flushed into their country by Angela Merkel.

This is a monumental victory not only for the Danes but for European people the world over.

The Guardian:

The DPP took more than 21% of the vote and 37 seats in the country’s 179-seat parliament. On a night of political contradictions, the centre-left Social Democrats, who increased their vote and were easily the biggest party, conceded defeat and Helle Thorning-Schmidt, Denmark’s first female prime minister, resigned as party leader.

Despite becoming the new strongman of Danish politics, Kristian Thulesen Dahl, the DPP leader, held out the prospect that he would stay out of government, preferring to wield influence by propping up a minority coalition of the centre-right while maintaining his party’s independence, even at the expense of ministerial positions.

Dahl is wary that the party’s image may be damaged by power, as has happened in Norway where the anti-immigrant Progress party has suffered a sharp loss of popularity since joining a coalition with the Conservatives. In Finland, the rightwing populist Finns party entered a coalition government in April.

In a speech on Thursday night, Dahl listed four priorities for the DPP: cutting the number of asylum seekers; reintroducing border controls; reforming the EU, with Britain as a close ally, to prevent migrants claiming benefits; and raising welfare spending on sick and elderly people.

Denmark continues to show more promise than any other country in Western Europe, and with Eastern Europe coming out to protest the invasion, things are looking up.