Frederiksen prolongs uncertainty over early elections in Denmark

The Prime Minister of Denmark, Mette Frederiksen, has opened this Tuesday the parliamentary course without announcing the call for early elections, despite the fact that the Government risks a motion of censure by an ultimatum imposed by its own partners.

Frederiksen, who heads a minority Executive, had until this Tuesday deadline to announce the electoral advance, eight months before the current legislature technically expires. The partners have granted him one more day, with Thursday as the potential date for announcing the censure motion, reports Bloomberg agency.

Pressure on the cabinet increased in the wake of confirmed legal irregularities in the mass culling of 17 million minks to prevent possible coronavirus contagions. The Social Democrats, in fact, have fallen in the polls, which put the Liberals and Conservatives on the rise.

Read:  Fed Chairman Jerome Powell says it's "very premature" to suspend interest rate hikes - Peter Schiff fears it could cause an economic meltdown

Frederiksen has delivered before the Parliament a speech in which, although he has not confirmed the elections, he has slipped some outstanding remains and allusions to the international context, with special emphasis on the war in Ukraine and the recent sabotage of the Nord Stream gas pipelines in the Baltic Sea, local media report.

“It makes no difference which government takes over after elections. It will have to make difficult decisions,” said the Prime Minister, who mentioned security in a series of challenges that also include the economic crisis and climate change.

Read:  Transport masks : Simón anticipates the end of masks in transport "for next week or the following week".

The Best Online Bookmakers June 14 2026

Cloudflare rayID a0b6e56bedc52a83

dcKey 8ff7a903ea71284d8f4c1df5de998f52

Legendplay Casino

Legendplay Casino

Bonus

€500+ 200 Free spins

Royalistplay Casino

Royalistplay Casino

Bonus

€1,000

DirectionBet Casino

DirectionBet Casino

Bonus

€1,000