This article was originally published in Danish on September 19, 2017.
At the Danish People’s Party’s annual meeting in Herning, one participant cautiously asked if the party was perhaps becoming too housebroken – too much like all the other parties.

That is an understatement. In all areas, the party has betrayed the foundation on which it was originally built: the preservation of a Danish Denmark. They have almost unconditionally supported a head of government who purposefully works to break down Danish sovereignty in the relationship with the EU and with regards to the entire web of international conventions that thoughtless traitors have adopted over the years without asking the population, even though this is a surrender of sovereignty that makes Danish independence completely illusory. Instead of maintaining the fight for Denmark, they have promoted a number of Social Democratic key issues and have thus stopped sensible initiatives like tax cuts and lower car taxes, which in Denmark are among the highest in the world. They have even toyed with the idea of throwing themselves into the arms of Mette Frederiksen’s anachronistic and in every way harmful party, which bears a very significant share of responsibility for the creeping genocide of the Danes we are experiencing today.
When the Danish People’s Party calls it a victory that it has prevented necessary tax cuts, it is simply a sign that the party is unable to distinguish between the important and the unimportant. The crucial problem today is not maintaining the world’s highest tax burden, but rather preserving the Danish people’s right to Denmark and to live a Danish life in accordance with Danish traditions and Danish culture and not to be replaced by foreign peoples. The Danish People’s Party was created to prevent this genocide, not to maintain the absurd level of taxation necessary to pay for the politicians’ hospitality. Withdrawing from the EU, stopping all immigration and repatriating all foreigners should be the cardinal points that a DPP-supported government should stick to. That’s what should be the price of governing! Everything else is more or less irrelevant. And that’s what voters had a right to expect after the party’s overwhelming victory in the last general election.
However, the voters have not received what they were promised. The Danish People’s Party has not even marginally changed the country’s immigration policy, and even when the government opened the borders and let the invading enemy troops march in on the highway like a version 2 of April 9, 1940, the Danish People’s Party did not react by pulling the rug from under Løkke Rasmussen.
As a result, voters are increasingly abandoning the party that has failed them so badly. There’s nothing strange about this. The press likes to portray DPP’s decline as being due to allegations of misconduct in the handling of EU funds. Let’s be honest: even if the DPP may have had its fingers in the cookie jar, it certainly won’t bother the party’s electorate. All parties steal from that pot, but only anti-EU parties are accused of it. Every euro taken from the EU for the purpose of fighting the union is a euro well spent! No, it is the dishonesty in the handling of the voters’ trust that is the reason for the voters’ abandoning the party.
DPP is an unprincipled, populist and fundamentally dishonest party with no ideological foundation. This makes it similar to the other major parties. They run to where they think they will get the most votes so that they can continue their political and economic prosperity. Many Social Democrats have voted for the DPP because of the party’s patriotic profile. Consequently, the Social Democratic Party suddenly adopts a Nationalist tone in an attempt to retain Social Democratic voters, while the DPP becomes Socialist. Both parties become exponents of a kind of national socialism without any real content.
It is therefore logical that The New Right will attract a lot of votes from the Danish People’s Party, as they combine cautious nationalism with sound Conservative economic thinking, which is a logical and appealing combination. However, The New Right has no ideological foundation either, so we don’t have much confidence in that project. There is simply no neat political solution to the current existential problems. If the Danish people wants to survive, it must fight for it – partly against the invading forces, of course, but first and foremost against those compatriots who betray their homeland and serve the enemy. It should not be without costs to betray your people and pave the way for its annihilation!
Meanwhile, the New Right has disintegrated – because it had no ideological foundations but was organized around a charismatic (and good-looking) woman, whose main interest, however, proved to be herself and her own ambitions. Its new leader is fighting an uphill battle. Whether he can stay the more Nationalist course he has adopted remains to be seen. We wish him luck – but I am not optimistic. The DPP, too, has a new and far more competent leader, but when we see him waving two Israeli flags in support of Netanyahu’s genocide of the Palestinian people – which is only going to produce more refugees for Europe – we have our doubts about his ability to see the real roots of our problems. They don’t come from the Palestinians….
Party politics are not going to change anything at all!
JOIN THE RESISTANCE!
Povl H. Riis-Knudsen
Translated by means of AI
[1] The ”A” is the letter for the Social Democratic Party on the ballot. The flags around it are from the logo of the DPP.
