Cut the beard, if you want to work in a hospital — the Danish People's Party (DF) said in connection with the upcoming local elections on November 21.
This bizarre proposal came from Henrik Thorup, senior party member, top DF candidate in the Copenhagen region and vice chairman of the parliamentary audit service, and was backed by the party leadership. By Thorup's own admission, a ban should put an end to "concessions for Muslim traditions."
"When you have a beard this size, you are likely to have a certain religion I don't really care about," said Henrik Thorup, explaining his motive behind the ban to Berlingske daily. "You're making a statement: I am a Muslim. No Danish man, if they were a doctor, would walk around with such a beard," Thorup expanded.
The DF has been pushing for a ban on religious and political symbols among public servants. Recently, a political majority was reported to be in favor of a burka ban the DF has been proposing for a decade.
DF parliamentary group chairman Peter Skaarup backed Thorup.
"A doctor should look safe and neutral," Skaarup said.
Despite the fact that facial hair is still largely in vogue, Skaarup argued there was a marked difference between a hipster beard and a beard grown for religious reasons.
The beard ban predictably triggered an outcry. Liberal MP Eva Kjer Hansen called the proposal "the joke of the day" in a tweet.
Socialist People's Party chair Pia Olsen Dyhr posted a picture of a bearded man, introducing him as "Harun, a nurse with a big beard" and calling him "able and competent."
Hvad sker der lige for DF!!! Her er Harun, som er sygeplejeske m stort skæg! Dygtig og kompetent! #dkpol https://t.co/jDVswW35VB pic.twitter.com/8V0QlUxG7z
— Pia Olsen Dyhr (@PiaOlsen) November 9, 2017
Danish netizens went on to exercise their wit by posting numerous pictures of Santa Claus, Plato, Charlemagne's legendary knight Ogier the Dane and finally Hippocrates the father of medicine — all of whom had luxurious beards — as proof that a beard does not have to represent a "certain religion." Furthermore, many pointed out that Jesus himself almost always wears a beard.
Hvad med ham her? #lægermedskæg pic.twitter.com/xBouMOYjgh
— Dennis [Adult] ish (@Dennis_Obi) November 9, 2017
Fuldskæg #dkpol pic.twitter.com/3wpK6chmAd
— Clement Kjersgaard (@CKjersgaard) November 9, 2017
#hippokrates #lægekunstensfader pic.twitter.com/8wce7f8ryQ
— Jesper Støier (@JesperStoier) November 9, 2017
Jesus for det meste afbilledet med #skæg pic.twitter.com/6bA5bZ2rWl
— Lars Jakobsen (@larsjakobsencom) November 10, 2017
Furthermore, the DF gained media attention in its home country through a bid to change the electoral rules to prevent foreign citizens from running in municipal and regional elections.
At present, all EU, Norwegian and Icelandic citizens aged 18 and over are entitled to vote in both municipal and regional elections in Denmark, provided that they have a permanent address in the Nordic country. Additionally, all foreign citizens aged 18 and over who have had a permanent address in Denmark for at least three years are qualified to take part in the poll. In Copenhagen alone, the share of non-Danish citizens has been estimated as 15 percent.
Many Danish candidates, including Romanian Social Democrat George Matache, argued that language skills should not be regarded as a barrier to participating in local democracy.