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Denmark’s snap election on March 24-25 produced an inconclusive result that has triggered government resignation and lengthy coalition bargaining.
Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen’s Social Democrats took 38 of 179 seats — their worst result since 1903 — leaving the left-leaning “red bloc” with 84 seats and the right-leaning “blue bloc” with 77.
The centrist Moderates, led by former prime minister and foreign minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen, hold 14 seats and are positioned as kingmakers.
The Danish king on March 25 asked Frederiksen to explore forming a new government with the Green Left and the Social Liberal Party, but any working majority will require further partners and potentially protracted talks.
The vote was shaped by domestic concerns — cost of living, welfare, immigration and environmental issues — even as the campaign was overshadowed earlier by U.S. President Donald Trump’s high-profile push to control Greenland.
Greenland’s Naleraq party, which favours rapid independence, won one of Greenland’s two reserved Folketing seats, increasing pressure on Copenhagen-Nuuk relations.
With neither bloc able to govern alone, coalition choices will determine Denmark’s domestic policy direction and its posture on Arctic security and NATO ties.
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The vote left the largest party weakened but still central; fragmentation and mutual refusals between parties make coalition-building complex, placing the Moderates in a pivotal kingmaker role and pointing to protracted negotiations rather than an immediate stable government.






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