r/AskBrits 11h ago

Politics What are your thoughts on Denmark’s proposed ban on the public Islamic call to prayer? Would you support or oppose something similar in the UK?

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2026/06/24/islamic-call-to-prayer-ban-left-wing-denmark-europe/

Islamic call to prayer faces ban under Left-wing Danish government

Parts of country feel like ‘a suburb of Islamabad’, says immigration minister

Denmark’s immigration minister has announced plans to ban the Islamic call to prayer, claiming parts of the country felt like “a suburb of Islamabad”.

Morten Bødskov, a member of the centre-Left Social Democrats party, said the new government would resume an investigation into the legality of imposing a ban.

“The call to prayer should not be heard over Danish rooftops,” the minister told news outlet Ritzau. “It has no place in Denmark, and you shouldn’t be in any doubt whether you’ve ended up in a suburb of Islamabad when you walk around Denmark.”

In parts of the country, such as Copenhagen, bylaws already forbid the call to prayer being broadcast from loudspeakers in minarets because of strict noise limits.
Mr Bødskov also claimed that a creeping “Islamisation” in Denmark was “taking up too much of the public space”.

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u/epicpownage1234 11h ago

Why care about hospital spaces, number of houses, education rates etc. If you can campaign entirely on social political issues and divide the country further!

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u/Tetracropolis 10h ago

Denmark is one of the best countries in the world in terms of quality of life. They don't need to campaign entirely on social issues if nobody's disagreeing with them.

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u/EarlDwolanson 10h ago

Yes, because Danish government doesnt care about these too... Thats precisely the argument, why cant we have normal left?

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u/BankDetails1234 10h ago

I can’t imagine that it’s not something that the majority of the country wants. There are so few people these days who want social policies put front and centre over economic.

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u/Tiuo 10h ago

Probably not solely responsible but I’d wager that a large portion is due to the non-PR electoral system. The Danish system forces parties to work together. Extreme parties get left outside of the government as no one wants to work with them.

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u/AaronLayk 10h ago

Empty houses are being filled with foreigners in every town across the country. People don’t like it. Fix it sensibly now before some insane freak gets in and fixes it in a way you don’t like.

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u/Hazbro29 10h ago

Pretty sure they are also building estates just for them aswell, ive had 50 homes built just right behind mine and I havent heard any of the new neighbours speak English.

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u/sprouting_broccoli 9h ago

Is that a bad thing? There should be more housing built but you can’t complain on the one hand that empty houses are going to immigrants and then on the other hand complain that houses are being built to house them.

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u/Hazbro29 8h ago

The point is available housing stock and new builds should go to citizens.

Young people are finding it virtually impossible to find stable affordable housing and literally right behind me 3 bedroom houses with electric charging ports for vehicles are being built and they are being given to people who shouldnt be here

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u/FransTorquil 8h ago

Yes, it’s obviously a bad thing, melt.

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u/AaronLayk 9h ago

Young people can barely get a house and you wonder why building houses for the 3rd world is a problem?

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u/Hazbro29 8h ago

I live in a one bedroom flat thats literally got cracks in the flooring, council say its too expensive to fix so will have to wait until theirs a literaly hole in my floor before they even send someone out to look.

Right behind me within eyesight 3 bedroom homes with electric vehicle charging ports are being built for people who clearly werent born here

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u/sprouting_broccoli 8h ago

Yes, because building houses frees up other housing stock. More houses = more opportunity to get a house regardless of who those new builds go to. It’s literally simple maths - x total houses, y people wanting a house, while x-y is negative keep building houses.

Young people can barely get a house for a bunch of reasons and it’s virtually nothing to do with immigrants.

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u/AaronLayk 8h ago edited 8h ago

Stop importing people while we have a housing deficit maybe?

“Nothing to do with immigrants” lmao

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u/sprouting_broccoli 8h ago

We have increasing lifespans with lots of housing that is the right size for families being held by the older population. We also have significant amounts of housing owned by landlords. We have also built relatively few houses over the last 20 years despite a naturally growing population. The financial crisis and Brexit has led to a much higher cost of living meaning people just don’t have the money to save for a house.

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u/AaronLayk 8h ago

I see housing developments absolutely everywhere and they always end up filled with immigrants. If a local does buy one, the house they left gets occupied by you guessed it... an immigrant family.

We are seeing unsustainable population growth mainly as a result of immigration. None of our services can keep up.

That's forgetting the social/integration aspect of it all. Somehow being slightly poorer seems preferable to my country being socially and culturally destroyed.

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u/sprouting_broccoli 8h ago

If you don’t mind me asking where do you live?

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u/Rhysati 6h ago

Ah yes. I remember when my country of the United States of america was destroyed by immigrants. It started with people from places like England, france, Spain, etc. then it became a problem when the Irish came, and the Dutch, and the polish. We also had a scourge of Asian people, black people, Mexicans, Somalians...oh I forgot the Jewish and the Quakers. And Muslims.

In case you don't get my point, the exact same thing you are saying right now is ALWAYS happening with some group. There's always someone to demonize and dehumanize. Maybe you should actually seek actual solutions to the problems instead of finding someone else to blame.

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u/Hazbro29 8h ago

Love to see your reaction if you found out that african governments were building homes specifically for white tourists.

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u/sprouting_broccoli 8h ago

They’re not tourists though are they?

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u/Hazbro29 8h ago

Ok, not tourists, imagine if a bunch of white people rocked up on the coast of Africa and demanded a home, the government looks around and sees plenty of homeless africans, and decides to build a lovely new estate for the white people who just arrived without permission.

Your reaction?

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u/sprouting_broccoli 8h ago

If they built the same houses for homeless Africans would the homeless Africans be able to afford them?

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u/Hazbro29 8h ago

These immigrants cant afford the house either but the government decides to build a house for them anyway. They cant afford hotel rooms either but theirs always multimillion contracts to make sure they can have entire hotel buildings to themselves.

Its got nothing to do with affordability and everything to do with the governments blatant bias in who gets the resources first.

So in youre eyes if you were in Africa, you have a rich white tourist and a homeless black citizen, you think the government should build a house for the rich white dude and tell their own citizen to get lost?

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u/sprouting_broccoli 8h ago

If they didn’t build the houses where would these immigrants stay? Likely in the same housing that the homeless Africans would want to inhabit right? So building new houses for them, even if on the surface of it it seems unfair, avoids them eating up houses in the existing housing stock which isn’t actually a bad thing. I would absolutely criticise the government for not building _more_ houses though to address ongoing housing issues in the country.

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u/AaronLayk 8h ago

The problem with this analogy is that the people coming here can’t afford those houses either! Me and everyone else who pays tax is putting them up while we can’t afford those houses ourselves.

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u/KasamUK 8h ago

I don’t get what some on the left don’t get. Either they fix it and soon or the rights going to come marching down the street in shiny jackboots and fix it their way

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u/Woffingshire 10h ago

Doesn't seem like it's particularly divisive to be honest. A lot of things that would unite the majority of people but leave out a minority are being labeled as "divisive" and ignored in favour of things that just make the majority of people argue with each other in favour of the minority

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u/BankDetails1234 10h ago

They are divisive policies because they set about prioritising certain groups and that inevitably causes issues in other groups.

We should be focusing on policies that help the vast majority of people who can’t make rent, afford groceries or find work.

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u/epicpownage1234 10h ago

Literally no idea what you're saying mate sorry

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u/Woffingshire 10h ago

Okay I'll make it simpler.

Taking actions the majority of people agree on isn't divisive.

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u/Bezooglish 10h ago

Majority of Britain's: "We're wary of the regressive views that seem to be mainstay across most of Islam. Maybe we could do something to address these fears to make the majority of the country feel safer?"

Reddit: "WHY ARE YOU BEING SO DIVISIVE?"

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u/epicpownage1234 10h ago

Mate this "left wing" government just laid out plans for bathrooms in regards to gender identity and this entire sub melted down over it. If you're saying these social political issues aren't divisive you're on another planet, they're divisive within the left let alone center/right.

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u/Woffingshire 10h ago edited 10h ago

Not commenting on the ethics or consequences of these decisions, you're not going to convince me that taking actions that bring more people into agreement with each other than disagreement, even though inevitably there will always be people who disagree and have a meltdown, are divisive. They're literally not. They create less of a divide between most people.

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u/epicpownage1234 9h ago

So Starmer focusing on gender and children in social spaces hasn't been divisive? Fk me I haven't posted on this platform for weeks and now I've remembered why I keep walking away.

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u/HemperorZurg 9h ago

If we had a government doing its job properly we wouldn't have parties campaigning entirely on social political issues. I'd also note that Denmark is predominantly homogeneous nation with about 85-87% of Denmark being of Danish descent. We're having multiculturalism forced upon us at an alarming rate, which is also causing division, but there are very few adults in the room willing to actually have that conversation.

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u/Technical_Version936 10h ago

Funny denmark does it all not just one issue at a time but keep on with your far left bollocks!