Finnish Prime Minister Juha Sipilä’s announcement Saturday that he’d offer his home to refugees is not only a good attempt by the government to steer Finland back to the direction of other Western European nations in the refugee ongoing crisis but a clear show of leadership that has been lacking.
The decision to offer refugees temporary shelter in his home is a clear snub at its anti-immigration partner, the Perussuomalaiset (PS),* which would be more than happy lead Finland in the direction of the Baltic States, Poland, Slovakia and Hungary in the ever-growing humanitarian crisis.
When asked Friday what Europe should do to resolve the refugee crisis, PS chairman and Foreign Minster Timo Soini gave the same answer as Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. He said that the EU should enforce its border controls and not permit people from entering the EU.
If it was difficult for the PS to approve the bailout package to Greece, how is the anti-immigration party, which has promised to resolve the “Somali and Muslim problem” in Finland, going to explain to its voters that it forms part of a government that let in a record number of refugees?
What excuse, as with the bailout package to Greece, will the PS tell their voters?

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What was the stick the broke the camel’s back or was it broken at all?
Did Sipilä get encouraged by German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who said this week that “there sill be zero tolerance for those who put in question the dignity of other people?”
What exactly made the prime minister make such a pledge?
Was it a subtle way by Sipilä of telling the PS to either shape up or ship out?
Continue reading “Finland’s PM offers his home to refugees – how long will it take for the PS to exit government?”