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Denmark’s Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen submitted her government’s resignation to the king on March 25 after a snap election left no clear parliamentary majority.
Official results from the March 24 vote showed Frederiksen’s Social Democrats fell to 38 seats (about 21.9% of the vote) — their weakest result since the early 1900s — while the left‑wing “red bloc” took 84 seats and the right‑wing “blue bloc” 77 in the 179‑seat Folketing.
The centrist Moderates, led by Foreign Minister and former premier Lars Løkke Rasmussen, won 14 seats and emerged as potential kingmakers.
The anti‑immigration Danish People’s Party surged to roughly 9.1% of the vote and made significant gains.
Frederiksen will stay on as caretaker while party leaders enter potentially lengthy negotiations to identify a “royal investigator” to lead government formation; she remains a contender to head a new coalition but faces rivals — notably Liberal leader and defence minister Troels Lund Poulsen — who have ruled out partnering with her.
The result elevates domestic issues such as migration and the cost of living, even as fallout from the recent Greenland dispute with the United States continues to shape foreign policy calculations.
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