Denmark election: left-wing bloc led by PM Mette Frederiksen clings to power with razor-thin win
- Denmark’s voters hand the Social Democratic Party a mandate to form a new government in a general election
- Result seen as a vote of confidence in Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen’s handling of the pandemic and her leadership
Denmark’s left-wing bloc led by Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen reached out to the centre for broader collaboration on Wednesday after winning a one-seat majority in a nail-biter general election.
Frederiksen’s five-party “red” bloc had looked set to lose its majority as vote counting wore on throughout Tuesday evening, but as the last votes were tallied, the bloc eked out the 87 seats it needed in mainland Denmark.
Together with another three seats from the autonomous overseas territories of the Faroe Islands and Greenland, the bloc holds a total of 90 of parliament’s 179 seats.
Opinion polls had predicted a historically weak election for the Social Democrats, but they instead gained two seats compared to the 2019 election, winning 27.5 per cent of votes.
“Social democracy had its best election in over 20 years,” Frederiksen said in a speech to campaign supporters early Wednesday.
“We are a party for all of Denmark,” she added.