TRADE WARS
Hands off our public holiday, cry angry Danes
By Camille BAS-WOHLERT
Copenhagen (AFP) Jan 26, 2023

The Danish government's plan to abolish a public holiday to help fund the defence budget amid the war in Ukraine is putting Denmark's cherished welfare model at risk, the country's biggest trade union warned.

"It's a big threat to the Danish model", said Lizette Risgaard, the head of the FH union which has 1.3 million members in a country of 5.9 million inhabitants.

"Politicians should stay out of labour market issues. If they go through with this they'll be imposing their will and violate our agreements", she thundered in an interview with AFP on Wednesday.

The left-right government coalition in power since December, headed by Social Democratic Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen, plans to scrap the religious holiday known as "Great Prayer Day", observed since the 17th century.

Initially introduced as a day of prayer, fasting and penitence, it falls on the fourth Friday after Easter and is now a common date for confirmations.

But the government wants to get rid of it and use the money to raise the defence budget to NATO's target of two percent of GDP by 2030, instead of 2033 as previously planned.

The government insists the accelerated calendar is necessary due to Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

The move is expected to provide an extra three billion kroner ($440 million) to state coffers.

The cancelled holiday would entail an additional 7.4 hours of labour per worker, according to the government.

"I don't think it's a problem to have to work an extra day", Frederiksen said.

"We are facing enormous expenditures for defence and security, health care, psychiatry and the green transition," she said, presenting the new government's programme to parliament.

Danes will have to work an extra day, which their employers will have to pay them for.

But the public holiday and the wages paid to both those who work that day and those who are off, are already enshrined in the country's sacred collective wage agreements.

- Overwhelming opposition -

"It's a public holiday. And of course, they can say 'OK, we want to abolish it'", said Risgaard.

"But then they are going against what we have agreed upon in negotiations: to have the right to be with your family that day.

"In our collective wage agreements, there are 600 different ways of defining wages when someone works that day," she said.

A recent poll by the Epinion institute indicated an overwhelming majority of Danes opposed the move, which was not mentioned during last autumn's election campaign.

Only 17 percent supported the plan, while 75 percent were against it.

"They're interfering with the Danish model," Pernille Holm, a physiotherapist in her 30s, told AFP on Thursday.

"We have a way of doing things here in Denmark. We (negotiate) with our employer. And the unions negotiate our rights as workers."

"The government should not be able to do anything without including these two parts," she insisted.

- Deja vu -

An online petition started by FH has garnered almost half a million signatures.

Only the three governmental parties, which hold a majority in parliament, support the measure.

The Lutheran Church and organisations representing military employees have also protested vehemently.

"I am furious that they are using the military this way by saying that the money from the public holiday will go to increasing the budget," the head of the main union representing military personnel, Jesper Korsgaard Hansen, told tabloid B.T.

In parliament, the nine opposition parties ranging from the extreme left to the extreme right say they will refuse to take part in any new defence policy agreement until the government withdraws its plan.

For Danes, there is a sense of deja vu.

Ten years ago, a Social Democratic government tried to abolish the same public holiday but gave up amid a national outcry.

Soren, a 36-year-old dad pushing his child in a pram, told AFP he thinks the plan is "a bad idea" but believes the holiday will undoubtedly disappear at some point.

"They have had it on their mind for almost a decade," he said. "So it will happen sometime".


Related Links
Global Trade News

TRADE WARS
Lula urges EU-South America regional trade deal before China talks
Montevideo (AFP) Jan 25, 2023
Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva on Wednesday called for the South American trade bloc Mercosur to urgently seal a free trade agreement with the European Union before negotiating with China. Lula made the comments in Uruguay, which has been pursuing its own commercial deal with Beijing, despite opposition from Mercosur - made up of Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay. The EU reached a trade agreement in 2019 with Mercosur following 20 years of negotiations, but the deal has not ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

TRADE WARS
Kremlin keeps mum on missile systems seen on Moscow rooftops

Netherlands set to boost push for Patriot missile defenses in Ukraine

Ukraine forces to receive Patriot air defense training in US: Pentagon

France sends air defence missiles to Ukraine: Macron

TRADE WARS
Ukraine missile toll rises to 40 as Russia denies attack

Australia buys Ukraine-tested US missile system

Raytheon Intelligence and Space awarded Missile Track Custody development contract

N. Korea fires short-range ballistic missile: S. Korea military

TRADE WARS
Swift developing flight planning software for drones in urban environments

Feathered robotic wing paves way for flapping drones

Northrop Grumman partners with NASA to shape integration of uncrewed aircraft into national airspace

All-out drone war in Ukraine points to future

TRADE WARS
Viasat managed services contract by US Marine Corps

OneWeb and Marsh's mission-critical collaboration continues

Northrop Grumman, AT&T and Fujitsu demonstrate 5G-powered capabilities to support Joint Force

Blocking radio waves and electromagnetic interference with the flip of a switch

TRADE WARS
Norway fund drops China, India firms over Myanmar as junta accused of war crimes

Germany says allies can start training Ukrainians on tanks

Germany ready to let Poland send Leopard tanks to Ukraine: foreign minister

Western weapons surge to Ukraine underlines new resolve

TRADE WARS
Morocco says to boost military ties with Israel

Norway stocks up on ammunition with major order

Japan approves budget including record defence spending

$858 bn US defense bill scraps military vaccine mandate

TRADE WARS
Anti-Turkey demo in Sweden deepens tensions over NATO bid

US, Philippines vow to boost security ties to address 'flashpoints'

Kremlin warns of escalation if West gives Ukraine longer range weapons

Kyiv urges allies to 'considerably' boost military aid

TRADE WARS