Denmark
Has a Big Fourth of July Party. This Year, the U.S. Is Uninvited.
Furious
at President Trump over Greenland, Danish officials took the unprecedented step
of pressuring organizers to cut American officials from the program.
By
Jeffrey Gettleman and Maya Tekeli
Jeffrey
Gettleman and Maya Tekeli visited the party grounds in Rebild, Denmark, to
report this story.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/03/world/europe/denmark-fourth-of-july-trump-us.html
July 3,
2026, 12:01 a.m. ET
Every
year for the past century, in the green hills of rural Denmark, thousands of
Americans and Danes come together to celebrate the Fourth of July.
The
gathering is billed as the largest Fourth of July celebration outside the
United States, and partygoers decked out in the Stars and Stripes sing American
songs, eat hot dogs and, because this is Denmark after all, down Danish beer
and aquavit.
This year
it’s going to be a little different.
Organizers
are expecting the smallest crowd ever. Some locals say they are sitting it out.
And the American government has been uninvited, something that has never
happened before and in the past would have been unthinkable.
Nixon.
Reagan. Walter Cronkite. Walt Disney. Even Dionne Warwick. Some real
heavyweights have flocked in on the Fourth to this blip of a town, Rebild,
surrounded by purple heather fields and pig farms. Just about every year, the
American ambassador to Denmark makes an appearance.
But this
year, President Trump’s threats to take over Greenland, a Danish territory,
have soured the mood. His obsession with Greenland has hijacked what used to be
a very tight Danish-American relationship. Many Danes now question why they
should celebrate the most patriotic day in the United States, on Danish soil,
with public funds no less.
And so
local politicians, no doubt smelling a
juicy issue, stepped in.
Lasse
Olsen, a municipal council member who has agitated against the event for years,
called Mr. Trump “an imperialistic mad man.”
He said
that, given the way Mr. Trump had behaved toward Denmark, the presence of any
officials from his administration would “disturb and distort” the festival. He
led the charge this spring that gave the event’s organizers an ultimatum: Cut
American officials from the program or lose logistical support and public funds
(typically around $50,000).
The
festival organizers agreed to remove U.S. officials from the program and said
that embassy officials were sad about it but accepted it. The organizers also
said that any Americans coming to the event this weekend in a private capacity
were welcome.
The
change stings. Organizers plan all year for a gala, a business round table and
live music, culminating in an outdoor bash usually with some famous speakers.
But this year, all anyone is talking about is Mr. Trump.
“It’s
embarrassing,” said Bruce Bro, a retired American businessman with Danish
ancestry who is a board member of the Rebild National Park Society, the
organization that plans the party. He said that he supported the decision to
keep American officials from participating.
The
annual pilgrimage to Rebild started in 1912. It was the vision of Max Henius, a
Danish American biochemist who helped refine beer brewing. He organized the
purchase of land in the hills as a place to celebrate the bonds between Denmark
and the United States.
In the
early days, Danes who emigrated to America (many to the Midwest, where the
landscape reminded them of home) flocked back to Rebild on the Fourth to
reconnect with kin. After World War II, when the United States was seen as a
hero and ties to the old country were still strong, Mr. Bro said that 50,000
people would show up.
But those
ties have faded. And the party in Rebild has taken a hit. Recent crowds rarely
surpass the low thousands. This year, organizers say they’ll be lucky to get a
thousand.
The
program still includes singing the Danish and American anthems, admiring
classic American cars, eating hot dogs and open-faced shrimp sandwiches and
spotting people dressed as American historical figures.
Last
year, Denmark’s foreign minister was the keynote speaker; this time, another
minister, lesser known, is planning to come, the Foreign Ministry said.
Lasse
Frimand Jensen, mayor of Aalborg, which is one of the municipalities involved
in the party, said that his council had decided to take a stand against
American officials only after consulting with colleagues in the central
government.
The mayor
wouldn’t say who, but he’s well connected in the same political party as Mette
Frederiksen, the prime minister, who has irritated Mr. Trump by her
steadfastness over Greenland. She’s from this same area of Denmark, too.
Over the
past few days, organizers have gone through their pre-party rituals: smoothing
out American state flags to decorate the party ground, setting up tables and
chairs and readying a fleet of golf carts to ferry older people down the
gravelly path to the spot in the rugged green valley where the festivities take
place.
Organizers
say their biggest struggle is to attract younger people.
Mr. Bro
said that he heard a lot of people, young and old, saying they didn’t want to
come this year because of all the Greenland tensions. As for his own views, he
said that he was “horrified” when Mr. Trump threatened to snatch the island
from Denmark and that his relatives felt the same way.
“It’s
very sad,” he said. “We want to keep this tradition alive. And we blame Trump.”
Jeffrey
Gettleman is an international correspondent based in London covering global
events. He has worked for The Times for more than 20 years.


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