Copenhagen Post
 
 
 
 
Bloc breakers: the renaissance of the 'radical' centrists


 
 (http://cphpost.dk/print/3261)  (http://cphpost.dk/printmail/3261) 

 
 
 
 
Jennifer Buley




 
May 20, 2011 - 10:43 

 
 
 
 
The Social Liberals have defied the status  quo of red- and blue-bloc 
politics for more than a  century





 
 
 
 
 
 
Just a few days after signing the historic deal to cut Denmark’s early  
retirement programme and raise the retirement age, it remains to be seen how 
the  past weeks’ dramatic power shuffle will play out. 
At the centre of the drama stood the Social Liberals, the little party 
whose  Danish name, ‘Det Radikale Venstre’, directly translates as ‘the radical 
left’.  For many generations the Social Liberals have wielded a bigger 
influence on the  nation’s political destiny than its share of voters would 
warrant. 
In truth, the party is neither left nor right, which is the reason for its  
unusual power position – one which last week gifted the centre-right and  
punished the Social Democrat-led opposition in what was just the latest 
episode  of the drama from Christiansborg, the seat of the nation’s government. 
Social Liberal leader Margrethe Vestager, summed up the paradox of her 
party  in her blog on the website of Politiken newspaper on the evening after 
the  announcement of the deal that she and co-chairman Morten Østergaard 
helped make  happen. 
“We made an agreement on retirement reforms with the Liberal-Conservative  
government and the Danish People’s Party. And we are endorsing [Social 
Democrat]  Helle Thorning to be the next prime minister. It is neither red nor 
blue. It is  radical.” 
In other words, the 106-year-old party that has positioned itself in the  
centre – with an emphasis on de-centralisation, balanced budgets and local  
democracy – has never been tied to either the left or the right. Instead, it 
has  switched teams throughout its history depending upon its own 
objectives. 
Their platform continues to be defined by budget balancing and  
decentralisation, with an additional emphasis on more open immigration laws to  
encourage internationalism in the Danish business and job markets, and 
continued  
investment in education, including the SU student stipend programme that the  
Liberal-Conservative government also plans to cut as part of the 2020 
budget  reform plan. 
Almost exactly 100 years ago, the Social Liberals ruled as a single-party  
government from 1909-1910 and from 1913-1920, with the Social Democrats as 
its  main ally. 
In the decades following, the party was the junior partner in Social  
Democrat-led governments. But from 1968-1971 and 1988-1990 it was also a part 
of  
Conservative-led governments. 
The Social Liberals have experienced internal shake-ups in recent years, as 
 factions of the party split to left and right over shades of policy  
differences. 
In the 2005 general election, the party made stunning gains, winning eight  
seats in parliament and nearly doubling its number of MPs from nine to 17. 
The  victory reflected a defection of voters from the Social Democrats, 
largely based  on rising voter interest in balanced budgets and more open 
immigration policies,  according to Aalborg University professor and civics 
expert 
Johannes  Andersen. 
But when the party tried in 2006 to capitalise on the victory by announcing 
 it would no longer play the role of junior partner to a party on the left 
or  right, but would pursue its own political aims – a strategy it called “
The other  way” – it ended up losing everything it had gained the year 
before. 
Weekendavisen political journalist Arne Hardis described the party in this  
way: “A closer analysis of the Social Liberal spirit [reveals] a [Georg]  
Brandesian-rooted self-esteem, which their historic position as a 
much-courted  centre party and kingmakers for 100 years has turned into an 
integrated 
feature  of the party’s political culture. In polemic short-form: the Social 
Liberal’s  politics are so intelligent that it would be a shame to let it go 
to waste just  because it does not have any supporters.” 
However, in a country like Denmark, where the strains of the credo of  
humility known as the Jante Law are still strong, having untouchable 
self-esteem 
 and being “so intelligent” that one feels justified in unilaterally 
pursuing  one’s own goals without regard for the group or bloc is not 
necessarily 
seen as  a strength. In fact, it could be the Social Liberal’s Achilles’ 
heel and perhaps  the reason why the party has stayed small, despite its 
influence. 
Internal splits after the failure of ‘The other way’ in 2006 resulted in 
the  defections of MP Naser Khader and MEP Anders Samuelsen, who created the 
New  Alliance party. The New Alliance, now known as the Liberal Alliance, 
allied  itself with the Liberal-Conservative government, while the Social 
Liberals  affirmed their support for the Social Democrats. 
Around the same time, Margrethe Vestager, who had been education minister  
from 1998-2001 and church minister from 1998-2000 in Social Democrat-led  
governments, became party leader. 
In the weeks preceding last week’s retirement reform deal, Vestager was  
accused of “splitting the opposition” and marginalising the entire economic 
plan  on which Thorning-Schmidt’s election campaign hinges by pursuing Social 
Liberal  economic goals even though it meant breaking faith with the Social 
Democrats as  the parties are positioning themselves for an impending 
general election. 
But the Social Liberals have always been clear about their economic goal of 
 ending the efterløn early retirement programme, and that single-mindedness 
–  independent of political alliances – is what the Liberal-Conservative 
government  and prime minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen capitalised on last week. 
It is also  what the Social-Democrats and Thorning-Schmidt apparently 
underestimated – a  strategic mistake that several of the party’s ministers 
said 
could come back to  haunt her should the Social Democrats win the election. 
“In the 30 to 40 years that I have been politically active, the Social  
Democrats have not been able to get anything accomplished, without having the  
Social Liberals on their side,”  former Social Democrat interior minister  
Thorkild Simonsen told Politiken newspaper. 
Ritt Bjerregaard, another former Social Democrat cabinet member, agreed 
that  Thorning-Schmidt had mishandled the early retirement negotiations. 
“I don’t think it was smart, for there certainly aren’t any polls that 
show a  liberal majority without the Social Liberals. As a leader, you can’t 
have a  policy that a majority doesn’t support,” Bjerregaard told Politiken. 
In contrast, the wooing of the Social Liberals and the sealing of the  
retirement reform deal showed Rasmussen to be a more able politician than his  
weak approval ratings would suggest. 
Weekendavisen’s Hardis described the centrist Social Liberals as a genie 
that  had been trapped in a bottle for several years, unable to wield its 
power, until  Rasmussen “rubbed on the lamp” by announcing that cutting early 
retirement would  be a central feature of his ten-year budget plan – the 
so-called 2020 budget  reform. 
Before Rasmussen’s announcement, Hardis explained, the issue of cutting 
early  retirement was “a curiosity” on the radar only of the Social Liberals 
and a few  members of the Conservative and Liberal Alliance parties. 
When Rasmussen made it a key element of his 2020 budget reform – and then 
got  Pia Kjærsgaard of the populist Danish People’s Party to open up to the 
idea –  the ‘genie’ was out of the bottle. It was a great temptation, if not 
an  inevitability, that Vestager and the Social Liberals would “split the  
opposition” when the opportunity for achieving retirement reforms arose. 
If Rasmusen was betting on that probability and playing Vestager and her 
team  into his hand, it was a subtle and effective political move – and one 
that  apparently went right over Thorning-Schmidt’s head, when she decided to 
dig in  her heels and walk out of the budget negotiations. 
Thorning-Schmidt – and Villy Sovndal, the leader of the opposition’s 
second  largest party, the Socialist People’s Party – were betting on the 
probability  that voters would stand up and shout down an attempt by the 
government to end  early retirement. 
That rejection from voters, however, did not materialise after the deal was 
 struck on Friday. On the contrary, a Gallup poll taken over the weekend 
showed  that more voters look positively on the reform than are against it and 
the  opposition’s lead in the polls had shrunk. 
What is clear to many political commentators is that Rasmussen has won a 
coup  by stirring up the Social Liberals with one of their key issues and 
getting  Denmark’s historic ‘kingmakers’ to bless his economic plan in the 
lead-up to the  election.




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