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2011 Danish general election

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FieldValue
countryKingdom of Denmark
previous_election[2007](2007-danish-general-election)
next_election[2015](2015-danish-general-election)
seats_for_electionAll 179 seats in the Folketing
majority_seats90
election_date15 September 2011
turnout87.21%
heading1Elected in Denmark
leader1Lars Løkke Rasmussen
party1Venstre (Denmark)
last_election146
seats147
percentage126.73
leader2Helle Thorning-Schmidt
party2Social Democrats (Denmark)
last_election245
seats244
percentage224.81
leader3Pia Kjærsgaard
party3Danish People's Party
last_election325
seats322
percentage312.32
leader4Margrethe Vestager
party4Danish Social Liberal Party
last_election49
seats417
percentage49.50
leader5Villy Søvndal
party5Socialist People's Party (Denmark)
last_election523
seats516
percentage59.20
leader6Collective leadership
party6Red–Green Alliance (Denmark)
last_election64
seats612
percentage66.68
leader7Anders Samuelsen
party7Liberal Alliance (Denmark)
last_election75
seats79
percentage74.98
leader8Lars Barfoed
party8Conservative People's Party (Denmark)
last_election818
seats88
percentage84.94
heading9Elected in the Faroe Islands
leader9Kaj Leo Johannesen
party9Union Party (Faroe Islands)
last_election91
seats91
percentage930.77
leader10Aksel V. Johannesen
party10Social Democratic Party (Faroe Islands)
last_election100
seats101
percentage1020.95
heading11Elected in Greenland
leader11Kuupik Kleist
party11Inuit Ataqatigiit
last_election111
seats111
percentage1142.61
leader12Aleqa Hammond
party12Siumut
last_election121
seats121
percentage1237.22
titlePrime Minister
before_electionLars Løkke Rasmussen
before_partyVenstre (Denmark)
after_electionHelle Thorning-Schmidt
after_partySocial Democrats (Denmark)
map{{Switcher

|[[File:Folketingsvalget 2011 - Opstillingskredse.svg|300px]] |Most voted-for party by nomination district and constituency |[[File:Folketingsvalget 2011 - Opstillingskredse (Blokke).svg|300px]] |Most voted-for bloc by nomination district and constituency |[[File:Folketing2011.svg|300px]] |Distribution of constituency and levelling seats}}

General elections were held in Denmark on 15 September 2011 to elect the 179 members of the Folketing. Of those 179, 175 members were elected in Denmark, two in the Faroe Islands and two in Greenland.

The incumbent centre-right coalition led by Venstre lost power to a centre-left coalition led by the Social Democrats making Helle Thorning-Schmidt the country's first female Prime Minister. The Social Liberal Party and the Socialist People's Party became part of the three-party government. The new parliament convened on 4 October, the first Tuesday of the month.

Background

Anders Fogh Rasmussen, who had been re-elected Prime Minister following the 2007 parliamentary election, resigned on 5 April 2009 to become the Secretary General of NATO in August. Polls indicated a preference for early elections over simply having Finance Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen take over as PM; the Social Democrats' Helle Thorning-Schmidt was also suggested as the preferred candidate for PM. However, Pia Kjærsgaard, the leader of the Danish People's Party, had reiterated the DPP's continued support for the government, previously avoiding a new election and making Rasmussen the PM within the existing parliament. However, when Rasmussen resigned that support became moot.

Date

According to the Danish Constitution, the election had to take place no later than 12 November 2011 since the last Danish election was held on 13 November 2007. The prime minister can call the election at any date, provided it is no later than four years from the previous election. Danish media and political commentators speculated about the timing of the election since Rasmussen took office as Prime Minister in April 2009. The election was called on 26 August 2011, after heavy media speculation.

MPs not seeking re-election

The following had as of March 2010 announced that they would not seek re-election.

  • Malou Aamund (Venstre)
  • Britta Schall Holberg (Venstre)
  • Preben Rudiengaard (Venstre)
  • Jens Vibjerg (Venstre)
  • Jens Kirk (Venstre)
  • Lone Møller (Social Democrats)
  • Vibeke Grave (Social Democrats)
  • Niels Sindal (Social Democrats)
  • Lise von Seelen (Social Democrats)
  • Jens Christian Lund (Social Democrats)
  • Jens Peter Vernersen (Social Democrats)
  • Søren Krarup (Danish People's Party)
  • Jesper Langballe (Danish People's Party)
  • Lone Dybkjær (Social Liberal Party)
  • Niels Helveg Petersen (Social Liberal Party)
  • Bente Dahl (Social Liberal Party)
  • Jørgen Poulsen (Social Liberal Party)
  • Line Barfod (Red-Green Alliance)

Retired MPs

  • Mogens Camre (DF)
  • Rikke Hvilshøj (V)
  • Gitte Seeberg (Independent)
  • Mia Falkenberg (DF)
  • Anders Fogh Rasmussen (V)
  • Morten Messerschmidt (DF)
  • Bendt Bendtsen (K)
  • Svend Auken (S)
  • Morten Helveg Petersen (R)
  • Thomas Adelskov (S)
  • Lene Hansen (S)
  • Knud Kristensen (K)
  • Connie Hedegaard (K)
  • Søren Gade (V)

Contesting parties

PartyLetterLeaderDenmark properFaroe IslandsGreenland
Venstre (Denmark)}}VenstreVLars Løkke Rasmussen
Social Democrats (Denmark)}}Social Democrats (*Socialdemokraterne*)AHelle Thorning-Schmidt
Danish People's Party}}Danish People's Party (*Dansk Folkeparti*)OPia Kjærsgaard
Danish Social Liberal Party}}Danish Social Liberal Party (*Det Radikale Venstre*)BMargrethe Vestager
Socialist People's Party (Denmark)}}Socialist People's Party (*Socialistisk Folkeparti*)FVilly Søvndal
Red-Green Alliance}}Red-Green Alliance (*Enhedslisten*)ØCollective leadership
Liberal Alliance (Denmark)}}Liberal AllianceIAnders Samuelsen
Conservative People's Party (Denmark)}}Conservative People's Party (*Det Konservative Folkeparti*)CLars Barfoed
Christian Democrats (Denmark)}}Christian Democrats (*Kristendemokraterne*)KPer Ørum Jørgensen
Union Party (Faroe Islands)}}Union Party (*Sambandsflokkurin*)BKaj Leo Johannesen
Social Democratic Party (Faroe Islands)}}Social Democratic Party (*Javnaðarflokkurin*)CAksel Johannesen
Republic (Faroe Islands)}}Republic (*Tjóðveldi*)EHøgni Hoydal
People's Party (Faroe Islands)}}People's Party (*Fólkaflokkurin*)AJørgen Niclasen
Centre Party (Faroe Islands)}}Centre Party (*Miðflokkurin*)HJenis av Rana
Self-Government Party (Faroe Islands)}}Self-Government Party (*Sjálvstýrisflokkurin*)DKári á Rógvu
Community of the People}}Inuit AtaqatigiitKuupik Kleist
Forward (Greenland)}}SiumutAleqa Hammond
Democrats (Greenland)}}Democrats (*Demokraatit*)Jens B. Frederiksen
Solidarity (Greenland)}}AtassutFinn Karlsen

Coalitions

The former Prime Minister, Lars Løkke Rasmussen, led a centre-right minority government consisting of the Liberal Party and the Conservative People's Party. This coalition government worked with regular parliamentary support from the national conservative Danish People's Party and often gained the necessary 90th seat for a majority in the Folketing through negotiations with the sole MP from the Christian Democrats Ørum-Jørgensen and independent MP Christmas Møller, both elected in 2007 as conservative MPs and since having defected.

Since the 2007 election, the Liberal Alliance (previously Ny Alliance) had gained momentum in opinion polls, and since early 2010, the governing coalition had not been able to gather a majority in the polls without the support of the Alliance. The continuing rise in the polls was to an extent the result of the internal crisis in the Conservative People's Party over the leadership Lene Espersen and the continuing debate over a lack of true liberal/conservative ideology in government policy.

On 13 January, the continuing turmoil within the Conservative group in the Folketing caused Lene Espersen to resign as political leader of the party and focus on her role as Minister of Foreign Affairs. A leadership election between Brian Mikkelsen, the Minister of Economic and Business Affairs and Lars Barfoed, the Justice Minister, was widely expected, but on 14 January the Conservative group in the Folketing unanimously elected Barfoed as their new political leader. He was formally elected as chairman of the party at a party convention within a few weeks.

The Social Democrats, under the leadership of Helle Thorning-Schmidt, had enjoyed continuing majorities in opinion polls since late 2009 and hoped to form a centre-left government coalition consisting of the Socialist People's Party and the Social Liberal Party with parliamentary support from the small Red-Green Alliance.

Both Margrethe Vestager (Social Liberal Party) and Villy Søvndal (Socialist People's Party) pledged their support to Thorning-Schmidt before the election. But there has been considerable debate about the future politics of this coalition, mainly because the Social Liberal Party demands a more liberal economic agenda. Also on immigration issues there are political differences between the three coalition parties. This led some observers to believe that the Social Liberal Party would not join a government coalition but instead opt to be a part of the parliamentary support of a new, centre-left government. In the event the Social Liberals did join the new three-party coalition government formed on 3 October.

Opinion polls

Polling FirmDateSourceVenstre (Denmark)}}"**Venstre (V)**Social Democrats (Denmark)}}"**Social Democrats (A)**Danish People's Party}}"**Danish People's Party (O)**Socialist People's Party (Denmark)}}"**Socialist People's Party (F)**Conservative People's Party (Denmark)}}"**Conservative People's Party (C)**Danish Social Liberal Party}}"**Social Liberal Party (B)**Liberal Alliance (Denmark)}}"**Liberal Alliance (I)**Red-Green Alliance (Denmark)}}"**Red-Green Alliance (Ø)**Christian Democrats (Denmark)}};"**Christian Democrats (K)**Venstre (Denmark)}};"**Government****Opposition**
[2007 Election](2007-danish-parliamentary-election)nowrap13 Nov 2007**26.2%****25.5%****13.9%****13.0%****10.4%****5.1%****2.8%****2.2%****0.9%****53.3%**46.7%
Capacent26 Feb 2010url=http://www.dr.dk/Nyheder/Politik/2010/04/02/083616.htmtitle=Fortsat flertal til Thorning - dr.dk/Nyheder/Politikdate=2 April 2010publisher=Dr.dkaccess-date=8 August 2011}}22.1%**26.3%**14.5%18.1%11.6%4.4%0.7%2.0%0.3%48.9%**50.8%**
Capacent31 Mar 201023.7%**26.7%**13.8%17.2%10.9%4.6%0.5%2.2%0.3%48.9%**50.7%**
Greens7 Jan 201121.6%**29.2%**14.6%13.0%4.5%7.5%5.8%3.2%0.4%46.5%**52.9%**
Gallup7 Jan 201124.3%**31.3%**12.2%12.7%6.0%5.5%4.3%2.9%0.8%46.8%**52.4%**
YouGov12 Jan 201121.8%**26.4%**13.5%15.2%4.4%6.2%8.3%4.0%0.3%48.0%**51.8%**
Capacent12 Jan 201123.1%**29.9%**13.0%13.0%5.9%5.5%4.3%4.8%0.3%46.3%**53.2%**
Gallup14 Jan 2011url=http://politiken.dk/politik/meningsmaaleren/title=Seneste nyt om politik - politiken.dk Læs seneste nyt om dansk politik og EU på politiken.dk. Nyheder fra Christiansborg, kommuner, regioner og Bruxelleslanguage=dapublisher=Politiken.dkaccess-date=8 August 2011url-status=deadarchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110803045942/http://politiken.dk/politik/meningsmaaleren/archive-date=3 August 2011df=dmy-all }}24.6%**28.6%**13.0%14.9%5.7%5.8%4.0%2.9%0.5%47.3%**52.2%**
Voxmeter16 Jan 201122.9%**31.1%**11.8%12.3%5.7%5.6%6.3%3.7%0.0%46.6%**52.7%**
Greens21 Jan 201122.6%**29.5%**11.6%14.2%6.5%6.5%5.4%2.7%0.4%46.1%**52.9%**
Gallup24 Jan 201123.9%**27.6%**14.0%13.8%4.9%7.3%4.7%2.7%0.8%47.5%**51.4%**
Greens4 Feb 201121.3%**31.2%**12.3%15.6%5.4%5.6%4.4%3.3%0.6%43.4%**55.7%**
Berlingske10 Sep 2011url=http://www.b.dk/berlingskebarometertitle=Meningsmåling, politik, partier - Berlingske Barometerpublisher=b.dkaccess-date=16 September 2011}}23.6%**25.5%**12.4%11.1%5.9%9.3%5.1%6.4%0.8%47.8%**52.3%**
Berlingske10 Sep 201123.0%**25.0%**13.6%9.8%5.0%10.0%5.4%7.2%0.9%47.9%**52.0%**
Berlingske12 Sep 201123.8%**25.3%**12.3%10.7%5.8%9.5%5.2%6.5%0.8%47.9%**52.0%**

Results

Reactions

Helle Thorning-Schmidt told a group of supporters: "We did it. Make no mistake: We have written history. Today there’s a change of guards in Denmark." Incumbent Prime Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen congratulated Thorning-Schmidt after conceding defeat: "So tonight I hand over the keys to the prime minister’s office to Helle Thorning-Schmidt. And dear Helle, take good care of them. You’re only borrowing them."

The Copenhagen Stock Exchange did not react adversely despite a fear of increased public spending and higher taxes because the election result was largely expected.

Analysis

The result was seen as leading to a possible roll back of some austerity programmes initiated by the previous government amidst the European sovereign debt crisis. The new majority for the leftist bloc deprived the Danish People's Party of the kingmaker role it held under the previous government and used to tighten Danish immigrations policy. However, fundamental changes were not expected, as the Danish political consensus would maintain the welfare system in Denmark that is financed by high taxes. The state of the economy was also seen as a key factor for the anti-incumbent vote.

Danish newspapers such as Berlingske also asked if a Red Bloc coalition could survive its tenure with the "sharp differences between [the] parties." It wrote that "with a parliamentary basis consisting of parties in deep mutual dispute over the most important questions in society, the election victory last night could turn out to be a short-lived triumph for Thorning-Schmidt."

Government formation

Though the Liberal Party remained the single largest party with the addition of one seat and the Social Democrats lost a seat, a three-party coalition of opposition parties together with the supporting Red-Green Alliance had a larger share of seats than the incumbent liberal-conservative coalition with support of the Danish People's Party. Prime Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen then tendered the cabinet's resignation to Queen Margrethe II on 16 September, following which she met with the various parties and tasked Social Democrat leader Helle Thorning-Schmidt with the formation of a new government. Rasmussen's cabinet would remain in office as a caretaker government until 3 October, when Thorning-Schmidt's cabinet, announced on 2 October, would be sworn in making her the country's first ever female Prime Minister. The Social Liberal Party and the Socialist People's Party also became a part of the governing coalition. The new parliament, by law, convened on the first Tuesday in October.

References

References

  1. (22 February 2009). "Danes Want Election if Rasmussen Steps Down | Angus Reid Public Opinion". Angus-reid.com.
  2. [http://politiken.dk/politik/article650312.ece ''DF siger god for Løkke som statsminister''] (16 February 2009) {{in lang. da. [[Politiken]].
  3. [http://www.altinget.dk/christiansborg/artikel.aspx?id=112175 De bliver valgt ved folketingsvalg nu] ''[[Altinget.dk]]'' 6. marts 2003
  4. (26 July 2011). "Kristendemokraterne vil med i finansloven". Politiken.dk.
  5. "Lene Espersens krise smitter af på Løkke - Politiko | www.b.dk". Berlingske.dk.
  6. Af Uffe Tang og Christian Brøndum. "Liberal Alliance redder regeringen - Politiko | www.b.dk". Berlingske.dk.
  7. Af Lene Frøslev. (13 January 2011). ""Det er den rigtige beslutning" - Politiko | www.b.dk". Berlingske.dk.
  8. Af Morten Henriksen og Chris Kjær Jessen. "Både Barfoed og Brian vil afløse Lene - Politiko | www.b.dk". Berlingske.dk.
  9. Af Louise Lyck Dreehsen. (14 January 2011). "Barfoed taler til pressen - Politiko | www.b.dk". Berlingske.dk.
  10. (13 June 2010). "Rød dominans - Politik". BT.dk.
  11. (2 December 2010). "Greens: Markant rødt flertal - dr.dk/Nyheder/Politik". Dr.dk.
  12. (20 October 2008). "Vestager peger på Helle Thorning". Borsen.dk.
  13. (19 August 2010). "Radikale med i regering - hvis ... - dr.dk/Nyheder/Politik". Dr.dk.
  14. (2 April 2010). "Fortsat flertal til Thorning - dr.dk/Nyheder/Politik". Dr.dk.
  15. Morten Stryhn. (7 January 2011). "Konservative i historisk nedsmeltning". Borsen.dk.
  16. "Se Gallup-målingen her - Politiko | www.b.dk". Berlingske.dk.
  17. Thomas Ambrosius. "De Konservative er spillet af brættet – metroXpress". Metroxpress.dk.
  18. (12 January 2011). "Blokke står uændret efter efterlønsdebat - dr.dk/Nyheder/Politik". Dr.dk.
  19. "Seneste nyt om politik - politiken.dk Læs seneste nyt om dansk politik og EU på politiken.dk. Nyheder fra Christiansborg, kommuner, regioner og Bruxelles". Politiken.dk.
  20. (21 January 2011). "Vælgerne straffer Pia Kjærsgaard". Borsen.dk.
  21. (4 February 2011). "Thorning sender blå blok til tælling". Borsen.dk.
  22. "Meningsmåling, politik, partier - Berlingske Barometer". b.dk.
  23. http://www.b.dk/ /
  24. (16 September 2011). "Denmark to get 1st female PM after left wins vote". Dawn.
  25. (17 September 2011). "Denmark elects first female PM". The Gazette (Montreal).
  26. "Denmark: Right-wing government defeated, Red-Green Alliance triples seats | Links International Journal of Socialist Renewal".
  27. "Danish PM tenders resignation to Queen".
  28. Acher, John. (1 October 2011). "Danish PM-elect seen unveiling govt Sunday -agency". Reuters.
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