Danish
rightwing leader asked to form government after Frederiksen fails to form
coalition
Denmark’s
king asks Troels Lund Poulsen to form government after PM struggles to gather
support
William
Christou
Sat 9 May
2026 15.17 BST
The king
of Denmark has asked a centre-right politician to try to form a new government
after the prime minister, Mette Frederiksen, has failed to put together a
ruling coalition.
The
announcement on Friday night shook the political establishment as Frederiksen
has been a staple of Danish politics for decades. Her left-leaning party, the
Social Democrats, won the plurality of votes in parliamentary elections in
March.
But
despite winning the most votes, it was the Social Democrats’ worst electoral
showing since 1903 and no party won a majority.
Frederiksen
has since tried to form a left-leaning government with the support of Lars
Løkke Rasmussen’s centre-right moderates. He is seen as a kingmaker owing to
his position in the middle between Frederiksen and Troels Lund Poulsen, the
chair of the centre-right liberal party.
However,
Frederiksen struggled to gather the support of Denmark’s increasingly
fragmented parties and on Friday night, Rasmussen, the country’s former foreign
minister, walked out of negotiations and threw his weight behind Poulsen.
King
Frederik then asked Poulsen to try to build a new government. The king issued a
statement requesting that Poulsen “lead the negotiations with a view to forming
a government”, without the participation of the Social Democrats and moderates.
Poulsen
will have to marshal a coalition of rightwing parties to form a government – a
fragile process that could take weeks. Already, the attempt to build a
government has been the longest in Danish history.
Danish
politics has skewed increasingly right in recent years, with the March
elections showing gains for several rightwing parties. The traditional
far-right party, the Danish People’s party, had a particularly strong showing,
tripling its votes from the last election to 9.1%.
Immigration
has become a hot topic in Denmark, as in other European countries, and even
left-leaning parties have adopted stricter policies on immigration control.
The
king’s statement indicated that the Danish People’s party had pushed for
Poulsen under the condition that the new government had “the explicit goal of introducing
measures that will lead to Muslim net-exodus of Denmark”.
After a
meeting with the king on Friday afternoon, Frederiksen indicated that there was
a growing possibility of a rightwing coalition governing Denmark.
Frederiksen
said: “The Danes … have composed the [parliament] in such a way that a
rightwing government can absolutely be formed. It might very well be that what
we are seeing now is in fact the beginning of that.”
Frederiksen
is popular for her handling of Donald Trump’s attempt to acquire Greenland,
resisting intense pressure and threats from the US administration. However,
Frederiksen performed much poorer on domestic issues, such as taxation and
immigration.
Analysts
said that while Frederiksen was down, she was not out. If Poulsen failed to
pull together a coherent coalition among the rightwing parties, the prime
minister could return with a coalition of her own.

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