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Frederiksen secures third term as Denmark’s PM with new centre-left coalition

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  • Mette Frederiksen announced Monday she will lead a minority government with the Social Liberals, Left Greens, and Moderates, relying on the Red-Green Alliance for a majority.usnews
  • The March 24 election produced Denmark’s most fragmented parliament in years, and a rival centre-right coalition attempt by Defence Minister Troels Lund Poulsen also failed in May.reuters
  • Frederiksen’s third term comes amid an ongoing diplomatic standoff with President Trump over the future of Greenland, a key issue that prompted the snap election.reuters

Frederiksen Secures Third Term as Danish PM After Coalition Deal

Denmark’s Social Democratic leader Mette Frederiksen announced on Monday that she has agreed to form a centre-left coalition government, ending more than two months of political uncertainty following the country’s March 24 snap election. The deal secures Frederiksen’s third consecutive term as prime minister and positions her to continue navigating a diplomatic standoff with U.S. President Donald Trump over the future of Greenland.usnews

A Fragmented Parliament Finds Its Center

The new minority government will include the Social Democrats, the Social Liberals, the Left Greens, and the centrist Moderates, according to Reuters. The coalition will rely primarily on the far-left Red-Green Alliance for a parliamentary majority, though it can seek backing from other parties on individual votes. The arrangement marks a leftward shift for Frederiksen, whose previous government was an unusual cross-bloc alliance with the centre-right Venstre and the Moderates.internazionale

The path to this coalition was anything but smooth. The March 24 election produced a deeply fragmented parliament, with 12 parties winning seats and neither the left-leaning “red bloc” nor the right-leaning “blue bloc” reaching the 90 seats needed for a majority. Frederiksen’s Social Democrats remained the largest party but recorded their worst result in over a century, with roughly 22 percent of the vote. Coalition talks stalled within a month of the election, and in May, King Frederik X asked Defence Minister Troels Lund Poulsen to explore forming a centre-right government after centre-left negotiations collapsed. That effort also failed, ultimately clearing the way for Frederiksen’s return.eunews

Greenland and the Road Ahead

The new government takes office at a fraught moment in Danish foreign policy. Trump has repeatedly pressed his desire to acquire Greenland, Denmark’s vast autonomous territory, straining relations between Washington and Copenhagen. Frederiksen called the snap election in late February partly in response to the geopolitical pressure, and her firm stance against Trump’s overtures boosted her personal popularity even as her party shed votes.reuters

With the coalition now in place, Frederiksen was scheduled to meet King Frederik X aboard the Royal Ship Dannebrog in Odense to formally receive the mandate to govern. The question of how long the new minority coalition can hold together in such a splintered parliament remains open — but for now, Denmark’s longest-serving active prime minister has secured her grip on power once more.aa

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