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Nordea’s Group Chief Economist Helge J. Pedersen notes that the Danish parliamentary election has produced a highly fragmented Folketing, with 12 parties entering parliament and no majority for either the red or blue bloc. The Moderates, led by Lars Løkke Rasmussen, now hold the balance of power. Pedersen highlights that complex negotiations could delay forming a new Danish government, while a caretaker administration handles only necessary, non-political decisions.
Fragmented parliament complicates coalition building
"The Danish parliamentary election ended with a fragmented parliament, where all 12 parties that ran in the election now get seats."
"Everything therefore points to the Moderates' Lars Løkke Rasmussen ending up as kingmaker, but also that it will require difficult negotiations and may perhaps even take a long time before a new Danish government is formed."
"Normally the process is completed within two to three weeks, but it took a record-long 42 days to form a government across the center after the 2022 election."
"With the harsh election campaign and the unclear election result in mind, it will hardly be much easier this time."
"In the meantime, the old government continues as a caretaker ministry, so Denmark is fully functional."
(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)











