
© Getty ImagesDanish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen during joint press conference following talks at the Chancellery in Berlin, Germany on June 11, 2025.
Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen's Social Democrats party has suffered its
worst election result in over a century, securing about 21.9% of the vote in Tuesday's general election - its lowest share since 1903 - according to exit polls.
While the party will remain the largest in the Folketing, the Danish parliament, it is projected to drop to 38 seats from 50. The entire left-leaning bloc appears short of a majority, with the Social Democrats, Liberals, and Moderates seen winning 84 seats in the 179-seat parliament, below the 90 needed.
Meanwhile, support for the right-wing anti-immigration Danish People's Party - led by Morten Messerschmidt - nearly tripled from the previous election to reach roughly 9.1%, up nearly seven percentage points, becoming one of the night's biggest winners. Messerschmidt had campaigned on a pledge to ensure zero net migration of Muslims and to abolish petrol taxes as a measure to ease living costs.
"The fact that the Danish People's Party has now tripled its support clearly shows that Danes are fed up with this and that there are a great many people who want a different direction for Denmark," Messerschmidt said after exit polls were published.
Comment: Just in time for the Empire's latest misadventure-in-waiting. Guess who will be following up the "Marines and Navy personnel"?
This is truly a bad idea: