Of the top 12 anti-immigration candidates below, only one didn’t get reelected: National Coalition Party’s Pia Kauma (UPDATED) and James Hirvisaari of Muutos 2011. While this is a small consolation in the face of the success of the Perussuomalaiset (PS) party on Sunday, the big question is if this populist anti-immigration party will form part of the next government.
We know that most of the PS are arch conservatives that want to keep Finland white but the big question is what now. How do they plan to put their petty provincialism, anti-immigration, anti-Islam and anti-Other sound bites into practice? Does the PS victory on Sunday mean ever-toughening immigration policy and ratcheting up white Finnish hostility towards migrants and minorities?
Finland’s Other, which have the same rights to live here as everyone else, will have to figure out and organize more effectively against a party that is openly hostile to us and may form part of government. Expecting others will do this for us is wishful thinking. The election results reinforces as well Migrant Tales’ role as a voice of migrants and minorities.
Stay tuned folks, what you saw on Sunday is nothing that we’ll see in the next four years.









