Nav Menu (Do Not Edit Here!)

Home     About     Contact

30 April 2020

Coronavirus DK: The "Covid bloc's" sickly dissent

On Wednesday Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen spoke (DK) during the question session in Parliament. She noted that Denmark’s strategy for controlling Covid-19 was working. The number of persons hospitalized has been cut in half in the month of April and now stands at 267. She said the government planned to announce next week a long-term plan for reopening so that citizens, businesses and other organizations know what to expect. It is negotiating the next phase of the reopening, which will begin on May 10, with the other political parties.


Inconsistent policy on reopening

The right-wing parties have been pressing for an earlier opening of businesses and other institutions. Jakob Ellemann-Jensen, the chairman of the Liberal Party, noted that people with medical conditions unrelated to Covid-19 were not able to get treatment because of a prejudice toward private hospitals on the part of the government. He said that the reopening has not been “controlled” as it was supposed to be. It has rather been arbitrary, with shifting policies, and businesses must guess the cabinet ministers’ mood if they do not want to be shamed for reopening even under legal conditions – an allusion to the controversy over IKEA’s reopening on Monday. Søren Pape Poulsen, the chairman of the Conservative Party, said that the testing policy has been confusing because it appeared that it was determined by a shortage of equipment rather than principle. 

When asked whether businesses would suffer if the relaxation of restrictions went too slowly, Frederiksen reasserted the government’s position that the process must be done gradually and carefully. She underscored the five main elements of the regimen: more extensive and aggressive testing and tracing; continued use of protective equipment, for example when people visit older relatives; frequent, thorough cleaning; routine social distancing in workplaces and schools; and prevention of “superspreading” in large gatherings such as concerts.


Illness close to home

In the middle of the session, Frederiksen suddenly left Parliament (DK) because she had gotten a message that a family member had fallen ill, and she was driven directly to Herlev Hospital. Later she posted a message on Facebook saying the situation was not serious and she looked forward to continuing negotiations the next day. She didn’t say whether the illness was related to Covid-19.


The “Covid” opposition

On Thursday, political commentator Lars Trier Mogensen, the editor of the newsletter dkpol, wrote that the current parliamentary opposition was the weakest (DK) in this century. He called it the “Covid bloc.” Danish parties are identified by single letters on voting ballots, and the right-wing parties’ abbreviations, beginning with C for the Conservative Party, by an odd coincidence happen to spell “Covid.” 

In his trenchant analysis, Mogensen wrote that it might seem as though the bloc had been bewitched and paralyzed by the corona virus because since the crisis Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen’s Social Democrats have become more popular than ever in recent times and their own standing in opinion polls has fallen sharply. But he hastens to add that the right wing’s decline had been underway before the corona virus came to Denmark, for several reasons. For example, the Social Democrats have moved to the right and preempted much of their traditional platform, leaving them with no distinctive positions on either cultural values or economic reform – in “psychic quarantine.” In any case, despite its complaints about the details and pace of the process, the bloc is unable to offer any meaningful counterpoint to the government’s handling of the pandemic.

No comments:

Post a Comment