赛派号

篮球鞋排名榜 Mette Frederiksen

Prime Minister of Denmark since 2019

Mette FrederiksenFrederiksen in 2025Prime Minister of DenmarkIncumbentAssumed office 27 June 2019MonarchsMargrethe IIFrederik XDeputyJakob Ellemann-JensenTroels Lund PoulsenPreceded byLars Løkke RasmussenLeader of the Social DemocratsIncumbentAssumed office 28 June 2015DeputyFrank JensenMogens JensenPreceded byHelle Thorning-SchmidtMinister of JusticeIn office10 October 2014 – 28 June 2015Prime MinisterHelle Thorning-SchmidtPreceded byKaren HækkerupSucceeded bySøren PindMinister of EmploymentIn office3 October 2011 – 10 October 2014Prime MinisterHelle Thorning-SchmidtPreceded byInger StøjbergSucceeded byHenrik Dam KristensenMember of the FolketingIncumbentAssumed office 20 November 2001ConstituencyCopenhagen (2001–2007)Greater Copenhagen (2007–2019)North Jutland (2019–present) Personal detailsBorn (1977-11-19) 19 November 1977 (age 48)Aalborg, DenmarkPartySocial DemocratsSpouses Erik Harr ​ ​(m. 2003; div. 2014)​ Bo Tengberg ​(m. 2020)​ Children2Alma materAalborg University (BA)University of Copenhagen (MA)

Mette Frederiksen K.1 (Danish: [ˈmetə ˈfʁeðˀəʁeksn̩] ⓘ; born 19 November 1977) is a Danish politician who has served as Prime Minister of Denmark since 2019 and Leader of the Social Democrats since 2015. The second woman to hold either office, she is also the youngest prime minister in Danish history, the first to be born after Margrethe II's accession to the throne, and the first to serve under Frederik X.[1]

Frederiksen worked briefly as a trade unionist (2000–2001) before embarking on a political career. She was first elected to the Folketing in the 2001 general election, representing Copenhagen County. After the Social Democrats won the 2011 general election, she was appointed Minister of Employment by Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt. She was promoted to Minister of Justice in 2014. After the Social Democrats' narrow defeat in the 2015 general election, Thorning-Schmidt stood down, and Frederiksen won the subsequent leadership election to replace her, becoming Leader of the Opposition.[2][3] Frederiksen led her party into the 2019 general election, which resulted in the bloc of left-wing and centre-left parties (her Social Democrats, the Social Liberals, the Socialist People's Party, the Red–Green Alliance, the Faroese Social Democratic Party, and Greenland's Siumut and Inuit Ataqatigiit) winning a majority in the Folketing. Frederiksen was subsequently commissioned by Queen Margrethe II to lead negotiations to form a new government, and was sworn in as prime minister on 27 June. In December 2021, she became the longest-serving incumbent female head of government in the European Union.

Her first cabinet steered Denmark through the COVID-19 pandemic.[4] In July 2022, Frederiksen's government was criticised by the Mink Commission for its handling of the COVID-19 mink outbreak, although she was cleared of deliberately misleading the public.[5] Under pressure from the Social Liberals, she called an early election for 1 November 2022 in which the Social Democrats won their best result in twenty years, while Frederiksen secured the highest personal vote; she subsequently formed a coalition government with Venstre and the Moderates, remaining prime minister.[6][7][8][9][10]

In domestic politics, Frederiksen has pursued an extremely hardline refugee and immigration policy, which has earned her both criticism and praise.[11] She has steered the Social Democrats towards the political centre, combining strict migration and law-and-order policies with support for the welfare state and stronger defence, an approach credited with containing the far right and cited as a rare success within the Party of European Socialists, but also seen as alienating younger progressive urban voters, especially in Copenhagen.[12][13][14] In 2020, her government enacted the Climate Act mandating a 70% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2030, but has been criticised for slow implementation, despite a 2024 agreement introducing a tax on agricultural emissions, including livestock flatulence, the first of its kind globally.[15][16][17] In social policy, she has granted earlier retirement to certain manual workers, strengthened vocational education and curtailed master's programmes.[18][19][20]

In foreign policy, Frederiksen initially expressed scepticism towards the EU, particularly with regard to immigration and the economy, and was even considered one of the most EU-sceptical prime ministers in Danish history.[21] However, this has since changed dramatically, particularly as a result of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.[22] In light of this, she has subsequently abandoned fiscal conservatism, now supports European common debt, and has officially withdrawn from the Frugal Four.[23][24] In defence and security policy, Frederiksen has adopted a hawkish line, emphasising the importance of NATO, and especially the United States.[25] She is regarded as one of Ukraine's staunchest supporters, and under her tenure Denmark became its largest economic and military contributor relative to GDP.[26][27] Denmark also increased defence spending to over 2% of GDP in 2024 and surpassed 3% in 2025–26.[28] In 2022, she won a referendum on abolishing Denmark's EU defence opt-out, and also extended conscription and expanded it to include women.[29][30] She was named the second most powerful individual in Europe in 2025 by Politico, which described her as one Europe's "most pragmatic operators" and noted her influence on steering EU policy on migration, defence and strategic autonomy.[31]

Early life[edit]

Mette Frederiksen was born on 19 November 1977 in the city of Aalborg in the North Jutland Region in northern Denmark. Frederiksen's father was a typographer and her mother was a teacher.[2] As a teenager, she campaigned to preserve rain forests, protect whales, and end apartheid.[32]

Frederiksen attended the Aalborghus Gymnasium. She holds a bachelor's degree in Administration and Social Science from Aalborg University, and a master's degree in African Studies from the University of Copenhagen.[33]

Political career[edit] Member of Folketing[edit] Frederiksen in 2001

Frederiksen worked as a youth consultant for LO, The Danish Confederation of Trade Unions.[2] She was elected as a member of parliament for Copenhagen County in the 2001 general election which saw the Social Democrats losing the first place and placing second for the first time since 1920.[2] After her election, Frederiksen was named as her party's spokesperson for culture, media and gender equality.[2] In 2002, she received the Nina Bang award for "showing political courage, enthusiasm and impact with social feeling".[34] Frederiksen received the Ting Prize in 2012. She co-authored the books Epostler (2003) and From Fight to Culture (2004).

After the 2005 general election loss, Frederiksen became her party's spokesperson for social affairs.[2] Following the election, she also served as the vice-chairperson of the parliamentary group of the Social Democrats.[2] In the 2007 general election that saw the Social Democrats losing two seats, Frederiksen obtained 27,077 votes, placing her seventh in the ranking of the ten Danish politicians with the most votes.[35]

After the 2011 general election that led to a Social Democrats government, Frederiksen served under Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt as Minister for Employment from 2011 to 2014 and Minister of Justice from 2014 until she succeeded her as party leader.[2][3] As Minister of Employment, Frederiksen sought reforms of early retirement pensions, flex jobs, and the employment system. The controversial cash assistance reform meant lower cash benefits for young unemployed and provided cohabiting mutual support, among other things.[36]

Leader of the Social Democrats[edit]

Under Frederiksen's leadership after the 2015 general election in which the Social Democrats returned to power and gained three seats in the Folketing, the party has moved back to the left on economic issues while taking a conservative stance on immigration.[37][38]

Prime Minister of Denmark (2019-present)[edit] 2019 election[edit]

The 2019 general election saw the Social Democrats gaining a further seat while support for the Danish People's Party and the Liberal Alliance collapsed, costing Lars Løkke Rasmussen his majority. With the result beyond doubt on election night, Rasmussen conceded defeat.[39] Frederiksen was appointed prime minister on 27 June 2019, heading an exclusively Social Democratic minority government supported by the red bloc of the Social Liberal Party, the Red-Green Alliance and the Green Left.[40][1] Despite hing run on an anti-immigration stance during the election, Frederiksen briefly shifted her stance on immigration by allowing more foreign labour and reversing government plans to hold foreign criminals offshore after winning government.[41][42][43]

2020 mink cull[edit] Main article: 2020 Danish mink cull Mette Frederiksen during a hearing on deleted messages[44]

At a press conference on 4 November 2020, Mette Frederiksen stated that the government had decided that all mink in Denmark should be killed due to the risk of infection with COVID-19. Subsequently, it emerged that this order was illegal and was described by many as being in violation of the Danish Constitution.[45] The government came up with changing explanations and several parties in the Folketing demanded an account of the mink case. The statement was published on 18 November 2020 and it emerged that six ministers had been warned on 1 October 2020 that the order was illegal. Minister of Food, Agriculture and Fisheries Mogens Jensen withdrew immediately. Mette Frederiksen has denied knowledge of the lack of legal basis.[46]

A commission of inquiry was set up to investigate the case,[47] delivering its report on 30 June 2022. The report stated that Frederiksen's statements at the press conference on 4 November 2020 were "objectively grossly misleading", but that she was not aware of the illegality of the order to kill all mink.[5][48] The Red-Green Alliance and Green Left, both of which are supporting parties of Frederiksen, announced they would not be voting for independent lawyer examination of the report, which could lead to impeachment.[49] Leader of the Social Liberal Party, also a supporting party, Sofie Carsten Nielsen similarly did not want independent examination, but demanded a general election before 4 October 2022.[50] If her demands were not met, she promised to support a motion of no confidence against Frederiksen.[6] Frederiksen later announced on 5 October 2022 that a general election would be held on 1 November 2022.[7]

Frederiksen received an official reprimand from the Folketing on 5 July 2022 for her actions in handling the mink case.[51] The reprimand stated that Frederiksen had "acted highly criticisable". This was given to her by her own government, with her own party, Social Democrats, not stating that she had committed any errors;[52] the opposition did not participate as they considered it inadequate.[53]

2022 Election[edit]

On 2 July 2022 Sofie Carsten Nielsen, leader of the Social Liberals, one of supporting parties of the government, encouraged Frederiksen to set an election date before 4 October after the report of the Mink Commission was published, criticising the government's handling of the Cluster 5 outbreak in November 2020.[50] Later the same day, Nielsen announced that she was ready to put forward a motion of no confidence if the prime minister refused to call early elections.[6] On 5 October, Frederiksen announced that general elections were to be held on 1 November, the first to be held on a Tuesday since the 2007 Danish general election.[7]

The 2022 Danish general election election was simultaneously the best result for the Social Democrats in more than 20 years and the worst result for Venstre in more than 30 years.[54][55] Frederiksen, the leader of the red bloc, thanked voters for giving the red bloc a majority; despite winning a slim majority of one seat, she decided to follow her campaign promise and resign in order to seek a new centrist government with parties from both sides of the political spectrum.[56] Following the results, she was congratulated by the prime ministers of Norway and Spain, Jonas Gahr Støre and Pedro Sánchez, both members of her same European political group, the Party of European Socialists.[57][58]

See also: Frederiksen II Cabinet

On 13 December, Mette Frederiksen went to the queen to present her new government, which includes the Moderates and Venstre; the first time the Social Democrats and Venstre formed a government together since 1978. Leader of Venstre, Jakob Elleman-Jensen, became deputy prime minister and minister of defence while leader of the Moderates Lars Løkke Rasmussen was made foreign minister.[59] Nine social democrats lost their ministerial positions due to the formation of the new cabinet.[60] Two ministers, both from the Moderates, are not members of the Folketing.[61] This marked the first time since 2007 that a prime minister was reelected into a consecutive term.

Foreign policy[edit] Frederiksen with President of the United States Donald Trump during a NATO meeting in London, United Kingdom, December 2019.

Frederiksen gained international attention in August 2019 when U.S. President Donald Trump cancelled a state visit to Denmark following her refusal to sell Greenland, an autonomous territory of the Kingdom of Denmark. On 15 August 2019, The Wall Street Journal reported that Trump had discussed the possibility of buying Greenland with aides.[62] Kim Kielsen, the premier of Greenland, responded by saying that Greenland is not for sale.[63] On 18 August 2019, after the rumor was confirmed by the White House, Frederiksen echoed Kielsen's comments, saying that "Greenland is not Danish. Greenland belongs to Greenland", and called the discussion "absurd".[64] On 20 August 2019, Trump cancelled the state visit, scheduled 2–3 September 2019, with specific reference to Frederiksen's refusal to discuss a possible sale.[65][66][67]

On 3 January 2020, Iranian General Qasem Soleimani was assassinated by the United States, which considerably heightened the existing tensions between the two countries. Frederiksen called it "a really serious situation". She oided the question on whether the killing was right, instead calling for de-escalation.[68]

Frederiksen with Finnish Prime Minister Sanna Marin in Copenhagen, 4 May 2022

At the request of the United States,[69] Frederiksen initiated diplomatic talks in early 2022 on the possible presence of American troops on Danish soil. Frederiksen expressed enthusiasm for the talks, stating that "We want a stronger American presence in Europe and in Denmark".[70] In December 2023, Frederiksen announced a US-Danish defense cooperation agreement, that allows for U.S. soldiers and military equipment to be based at Skrydstrup Air Base, Krarup Air Base and Aalborg Air Base.[71]

Frederiksen meets with President of the European Council Charles Michel in Copenhagen, 14 May 2024.

In June 2024, Frederiksen appeared in Normandy for the eightieth anniversary of the Normandy landings.[72]

2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine[edit] Frederiksen with Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Kyiv, 21 April 2022

Following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Frederiksen's government initiated political talks with the five main political parties of the Folketing (Social Liberal Party, Green Left, Venstre, and Conservative People's Party), and presented the "National Compromise on Danish Security Policy" on 4 March 2022,[73] in which a significant increase in Danish defense spending, an emergency allocation of DKK 7 billion for the Danish defense, a plan for independence from Russian gas, and a referendum on the Danish EU defense opt-out were presented.[74][75] The country will gradually increase defense spending to 2% of GDP by 2033 (as agreed within NATO), which corresponds to an increase in annual defense spending of around 18 billion DKK ($2.65 billion).[76]

On 21 April, together with Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, she visited Ukraine's capital Kyiv and President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. At the meeting, Frederiksen promised an increase in arms and military aid to Ukraine by 600 million DKK, bringing the total Danish aid to 1 billion DKK.[77] Denmark has previously sent 2,700 M72 LAW light anti-tank weapons to the Ukrainian army.[78][79]

On 24 February 2025, Frederiksen said she does not believe Russian President Vladimir Putin "wants peace in Ukraine" and expressed doubts about US President Donald Trump's attempts to negotiate a peace deal in the Russia-Ukraine war, saying that "I understand that many people think that a peaceful solution or a ceasefire sounds like a good idea, but we run the risk that peace in Ukraine is actually [could be - ed.] more dangerous than the war that is going on now."[80]

European Union[edit]

In 2020, Frederiksen was labelled "the most euroskeptic [Danish] Prime Minister in history" by the Danish online newspaper Altinget.[21] Due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, however, she "transformed from a skeptic into a strong advocate of [EU] cooperation".[81] Scholars and observers he since identified a marked reorientation in Frederiksen's EU policy.[22][82]

During the 2022 referendum on the EU defense opt-out, Frederiksen campaigned against maintaining the opt-out.[83] Following the abolition of said opt-out, Frederiksen stated that she had no intentions of seeking the abolition of the remaining opt-outs. She had previously, as justice minister, supported the abolition of the judicial opt-out in the 2015 referendum.[84]

In late 2024 she dropped Denmark's long-standing objection to EU-level borrowing to help finance common defence procurement,[85] and on 3 June 2025 announced that Denmark would no longer align with the informal "Frugal Four," arguing that rearming Europe must take precedence in EU budget negotiations.[24][86] While backing joint borrowing for defence-related purposes, Frederiksen has since opposed extending common EU debt more broadly, maintaining a narrower fiscal scope for such instruments.[87] Frederiksen has linked this shift to Europe's deteriorating security environment and has urged accelerated EU action on Ukraine and continental defence.[88]

2022 Nord Stream pipeline sabotage[edit]

Frederiksen said the 2022 Nord Stream gas leaks were sabotage, while cautioning that it was not an attack on Denmark as they occurred in international waters.[89] Frederiksen trelled to London and Brussels to discuss the leaks with British Prime Minister Liz Truss, President of the European Council Charles Michel and NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg.[90] She also talked with French President Emmanuel Macron over the phone. She reiterated to all she spoke with that there is a need for increased surveillance of critical infrastructure and that they must take Russian President Vladimir Putin's threats seriously.[91]

Military spending[edit]

In May 2023, her government decided to triple Denmark's military spending over the next 10 years. This spending will be partly financed by the abolition of a public holiday for employees.[92]

In February 2025, she said that Denmark would increase defense spending to more than 3% of GDP within the next two years.[93]

In March 2025, Germany changed its constitution to allow it to spend up to a €1 trillion on defense, security, infrastructure, and green energy over the next decade. Frederiksen called it "fantastic news for all Europeans".[94]

Response to the COVID-19 pandemic (2020-21)[edit]

Frederiksen led the Danish Government response to the COVID-19 pandemic.[95] In 2020, she issued an order to mink farmers to cull millions of these animals in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic; this decision later turned out to be unconstitutional.[96] In 2021, Danish Prime Minister Frederiksen joined forces with Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in setting up a joint research and development fund, and possibly production facilities for COVID-19 vaccines, to ensure they had long-term supplies for booster shots or to contend with new virus strains.[97]

Education reform[edit]

In June 2021, Frederiksen's government announced a new model of distributing gymnasium applicants. The model aims to solve the issue of ethnic and economic disparity and "parallel society tendencies" between gymnasiums by considering parent income.[98] Hey criticism was directed at the suggestion by the blue bloc, who called it "forced distribution".[99] A petition for scrapping the law gained over 50000 signatures, allowing it to be presented before the Folketing.[100]

A year later, in June 2022, Frederiksen and her government announced their intention to introduce a ceiling to the entry quotient[a] of higher education. Education offers with a higher entry quotient than the proposed ceiling of 10[b] would he to offer admission through other means, such as a subject-specific admission test. The goal of the ceiling is to lessen the pressure on students by reducing the need for high grades, and to allow students greater freedom in selecting education.[101]

In September 2022, Frederiksen proposed that approximately half of all Master's degrees would be shortened from two years to one year. This would mostly affect degrees in the social sciences and humanities, with natural sciences and medicine being left mostly untouched. The proposal was met with harsh criticism from students, academics, rectors and parts of the business world, claiming it would negatively affect the quality of education and require the learning of two years material in one year. Frederiksen denied this, claiming the quality of education was to increase and that workers could be trained on the job.[102][103]

Greenland[edit]

On 27 August 2025, Frederiksen, along with Greenland's prime minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen, issued an official apology on behalf of the Danish and Greenlandic governments for historic abuses against Greenlandic women, including forced contraception.[104]

Political positions[edit] Social policies[edit]

Frederiksen has stated a desire to be "Prime Minister of Children",[105] and in 2021, she presented a plan called "Law of Children", aiming to put children first in social cases, including giving municipalities more resources to take children away from violent parents, and to give children more rights in divorce cases.[106] In 2020, she also made a deal with the Socialist People's Party, the Red-Green Alliance, and the Danish People's Party, in order to give people who he worked for long the ability to get early retirement. This was also one of Frederiksen's main promises during the 2019 election campaign.[107]

Frederiksen is a vocal opponent of sex work because she considers it violence against women. For many years, she has strongly advocated for the prohibition of the purchase of sex, as in Sweden, Norway, and Iceland.[108] In 2002, she opened the debate on the abolition of prostitution, and was behind the 2009 congressional decision that the Social Democrats would "work for a ban on the purchase of sexual acts", saying that prostitution caused mental health damage to the prostitute.[109]

Immigration[edit] Frederiksen participating in the annual Kristallnacht remembrance event at the Copenhagen Synagogue on Krystalgade, 9 November 2025

Frederiksen became increasingly sceptical of mass immigration, as she believes it has had negative impacts for much of the population, a more pressing issue since at least 2001 after the September 11 attacks which intensified during the 2015 European migrant crisis. In a biography, Frederiksen stated: "For me, it is becoming increasingly clear that the price of unregulated globalization, mass immigration, and the free movement of labour is paid for by the lower classes."[37][38]

Under Frederiksen, the Social Democrats voted in four of a law allowing Danish authorities to confiscate money, jewellery, and other valuable items from refugees crossing the border.[110] The bill received harsh condemnation from the United Nations Human Rights Council,[111] and widespread comparisons between the plan and the treatment of Jews in Nazi-occupied Europe.[112] The Social Democrats voted for a law banning the wearing of burqas and niqābs, while abstaining during a vote on a law on mandatory handshakes, irrespective of religious sentiment, at citizenship ceremonies and on a plan to house criminal asylum seekers on a bridgeless island on which they would he to stay at night.[37] Frederiksen also backed the right-wing populist Danish People's Party in their paradigm shift push to make repatriation, rather than integration, the goal of asylum policy. She has called for a cap on non-Western immigrants, expulsion of asylum seekers to a reception centre in North Africa, and forced 37-hours-per-week labour for immigrants in exchange for benefits.[37]

Frederiksen has referred to Islam as a "barrier to integration", arguing that some Muslims "do not respect the Danish judicial system", that some Muslim women refuse to work for religious reasons, and that Muslim girls are subject to "massive social control", and has called for Muslim schools to be closed.[113]

In April 2021, Frederiksen announced that Denmark's "ultimate goal" shall henceforth be one of "zero spontaneous asylum seekers". Danish Integration Minister Mattias Tesfaye added that "no exceptions will be made" towards that goal. Danish Refugee Council's Secretary General Charlotte Slente called the move "irresponsible".[114] The Danish state subsequently ceased the renewal of temporary residency permits to about 189 Syrian refugees, claiming that it is "now safe to return to Syria".[115]

Despite hing adopted new stricter migration policies than earlier Social Democratic governments, she and her government he also introduced a few relaxations of Danish immigration policies. Even though Mette Frederiksen and her government are against the idea of sudden asylum seekers, they are supporters of the UN refugee quota system and he reintroduced Denmark's participation in that system.[116] Other relaxations include getting children out of infamous migration centre Sjælsmark and increasing social benefits for refugees.[citation needed]

Globalisation[edit]

She has argued that the perception of the Social Democrats adopting the Third Way and practicing centrist, neoliberal economics and supporting unrestricted globalisation contributed to the party's poor electoral performance in the early 21st century. Labeling economic foreign policies of Europe as too liberal, Frederiksen has criticised other social democratic parties for losing their voters' trust by failing to prevent globalisation's chipping away of labour rights, increasing inequality and uncontrolled immigration.[37]

Climate change[edit]

Frederiksen's government made international news with the agreement to reduce Denmark's territorial emissions by 70% in 2030 compared to 1990,[117] the decision to stop oil and gas exploration after 2050[118][119] (also driven by the fact that only one company applied for a lease in the latest auction[120]), and the energy islands in the North Sea.[121]

Frederiksen publicly said: "I was a social democrat before I got green. And when I wake up in the morning, I am still a social democrat before I am green."[122]

More than a year after hing set an ambitious reduction target for the decade, there are in March 2021 no concrete plans for dealing with the remaining two-thirds of the needed reductions to achieve the Danish 2030 emission target.[123] Green NGOs he largely viewed Frederiksen's Minister of Climate Dan Jørgensen's tenure negatively in 2020.[124][125]

Frederiksen's government has described its climate action strategy as a "hockey stick" model.[126] This means it plans to await new technologies and falling costs and thus only achieve most reductions at the end of the decade. This strategy has been described by the other political parties as a "Bjørn Lomborg" dream.[127]

Despite pleas from the UNFCCC,[128] the International Monetary Fund,[129] the World Bank,[130] the Danish economic councils[131] and the Danish Council on Climate Change,[132] Frederiksen's government has postponed the implementation of a higher carbon pricing mechanism,[133] even though Denmark was a pioneer with its adoption in 1992.[134] The opposition to higher carbon taxes was positively received by associations representing the major emitting sectors such as the Confederation of Danish Industry[135] and the Danish Agriculture and Food Council.[136]

As of March 2021, Denmark stands to he a much lower price on carbon than its neighbours in 2030, with consequences such as trucks from Germany waiting to refuel until they are in Denmark to benefit from the low diesel prices in Denmark.[137] Denmark is also one of the four EU countries without carbon taxes on passenger flights.[138] In fact, Frederiksen's government had plans to guarantee domestic flights during the COVID-19 pandemic by subsidising domestic flights, a decision decried by green NGOs and the supporting parties: Red-Green Alliance and Socialist People's Party.[139] The decision was not implemented as the European Commission would not approve of it due to regulations on state aid.[140]

Frederiksen's government entered a formal agreement with the cement manufacturer Aalborg Portland (Denmark's largest carbon emitter standing for 4% of the national emissions) concluding that they did not he to reduce their annual emissions below their 1990 level of 1.54 million CO2 tons.[141] Previously, Mette Frederiksen had said: "I will chain myself to Portland before anyone is allowed to close them".[142]

Similarly, her government has been criticised[143] for allowing state-owned companies to continue the build-out of fossil fuel infrastructure like a natural gas pipeline of 115 km, with an associated socio-economic cost of $113 million for Denmark.[144] In a formal answer to the Parliament, the Minister of Climate Dan Jørgensen confirmed that the gas pipeline would not reduce the carbon emissions in the short term nor add any jobs in Denmark.[145]

As stipulated in the Climate Act, the Danish Council on Climate Change has to make annual recommendations for and provide a status update on the Danish government's climate efforts. In February 2021, the Danish Council on Climate found it was not likely that Frederiksen's government would achieve their original target of a 70% reduction of greenhouse gases by 2030.[146]

Controversies and criticism[edit] Private school case[edit]

In May 2010, it was revealed that Frederiksen's daughter, along with the children of several other prominent Social Democrat politicians, was being educated at a private school.[147] Along with her colleagues, Frederiksen was accused of hypocrisy by the Danish press as her party had long seen the promotion of public education as a key policy.[147] In 2005, Frederiksen had openly criticised parents who sent their children to private schools.[147] Frederiksen responded to the criticism by saying that her opinion on private education had become more nuanced since her remarks in 2005 and that it would he been hypocritical of her to put her own political career ahead of her daughter's best interest.[148]

The unemployment benefit case[edit]

On 14 March 2013, Ekstra Bladet announced that she and her ministry had failed to inform the Folketing about the correct figures regarding how many unemployment benefit recipients would drop out of the unemployment benefit system in 2013.[149] According to Ekstra Bladet, on 5 December 2012, the Ministry of Employment had new figures for how many people were expected to lose the right to unemployment benefits on 1 January 2013 and the following six months. The number was 22,679 people and thus significantly higher than the 7–12,000 people that the government had announced.[150] She was strongly criticized for this - and both the Unity List and the Danish People's Party subsequently called her in consultation on the matter.[151]

The new unemployment benefit rules were adopted in 2010 by the VK government and the Danish People's Party, and were to be fully implemented on 2 July 2012. The changes mean that the unemployment benefit period is shortened from 4 to 2 years. In the Finance Act agreement for 2012, it was agreed to extend the unemployment benefit period by up to half a year for all insured unemployed who exhausted the unemployment benefit entitlement in the second half of 2012. Therefore, it was not until 1 January 2013 that many began to lose their unemployment benefit entitlement.[152]

Immigration policies[edit]

Her government endured criticism in 2020 and 2021 for refusing to repatriate children with Danish citizenship from Syrian refugee camps in Kurdish-controlled Syria, due to their parents hing joined the Islamic State.[153] A medical report released in April 2022 revealed that many of the children were undernourished and that one 4-year-old in particular needed hospitalization. This led to her government preparing to evacuate the children on the condition that their parents do not come with them, which again led to criticism, notably from her supporting parties, the Social Liberal Party and the Green Left.[154][155]

Personal life[edit]

Frederiksen has two children from her first marriage.[32] On 15 July 2020, Frederiksen married her longtime boyfriend Bo Tengberg, a film director. They were married at the Magleby Church, an affiliate of the Church of Denmark on the island of Møn.[156]

Frederiksen has said that she is a non-religious person, but that she enjoys attending church for its cultural value in Danish life.[157]

2024 attack[edit] Kultorvet in 2016

A man assaulted Frederiksen in the Kultorvet public square in central Copenhagen on 7 June 2024,[158] two days before the 2024 European Parliament election in Denmark. This was one of several instances of political violence leading up to the elections: in May, Slovakian prime minister Robert Fico was shot several times.[158]

Bystanders said that she was roughly shoved, causing her to fall sideways, though she did not hit the ground.[158] A 39-year-old man from Poland was identified as a suspect and ordered to appear in court,[158] though he denied the charges.[158]

Frederiksen was taken to Rigshospitalet, and the Prime Minister's Office later released a statement from an orthopedic attending physician, which stated that Frederiksen had suffered a "contusion (to the) right shoulder and minor distortion [of] cervical vertebrae (whiplash)",[159] but was otherwise in good condition.[160] Police said that the suspect was a Polish national and that there appeared to be no political motive for the attack.[161] Days later, she said that she was still shaken by the incident, but said she believed it was "the prime minister who got hit", differentiating it from an attack on her personally.[162]

Environment minister Magnus Heunicke wrote on X that the attack "shakes all of us who are close to her".[72] European Council president Charles Michel stated he was "outraged".[158] Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, called the attack "despicable".[158]

On 7 August 2024, Frederiksen's attacker was convicted by the Copenhagen District Court and sentenced to four months imprisonment, deportation and a ban from entering Denmark for six years following his release.[163]

Honours & Awards[edit] Ukraine: First Class of the Order of Princess Olga (27 January 2023) — for a significant personal contribution to strengthening interstate cooperation, supporting the independence and territorial integrity of Ukraine;[164] Ukraine: Member of the Order of Liberty (10 June 2024) — for outstanding personal merits in strengthening Ukrainian-Danish interstate cooperation, support of state sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine;[165] Denmark: Commander 1st Class of the Order of the Dannebrog (22 November 2024)[166] Egypt: Grand Cordon of the Order of the Nile (6 December 2024)[167] India: Mother Teresa Memorial Award 2021 for her exceptional leadership in leading Denmark along the path of sustainable development, as one of the nations in the world which lives in harmony with nature.[168] Frederiksen has been included in the list of the "World's 100 most powerful women" by Forbes Magazine every year from 2020 through[169][170]2024.[171] See also[edit] List of current heads of state and government List of heads of the executive by approval rating Notes[edit] ^ The entry quotient is the minimum grade erage (as achieved in the gymnasium) to be guaranteed a spot at a higher education institution. ^ The Danish grading scale goes, from least to highest, -3, 00, 02, 4, 7, 10, 12. See Academic grading in Denmark. References[edit] ^ a b "Denmark's youngest prime minister to lead new government". Deutsche Welle. 25 June 2019. Retrieved 27 June 2019. ^ a b c d e f g h Biography on the website of the Danish Parliament (Folketinget). Accessed on 29 June 2019. ^ a b "Portræt: Mette Frederiksen skal finde sin egen vej" [Portrait: Mette Frederiksen has to find her own way]. Politiken (in Danish). 20 June 2015. Retrieved 22 June 2015. ^ Gronholt-Pedersen, Jacob; Skydsgaard, Nikolaj (18 May 2020). "Fast in, first out: Denmark leads lockdown exit". Reuters. Retrieved 26 June 2025. ^ a b "Minkkommissionen: Grov vildledning af Mette Frederiksen på pressemøde om minkaflivning". DR (in Danish). 30 June 2022. Retrieved 5 October 2022. ^ a b c "Sofie Carsten Nielsen: Vil vælte Mette Frederiksen hvis ikke hun udskriver valg inden 4. oktober". DR (in Danish). 2 July 2022. Retrieved 5 October 2022. ^ a b c "Mette Frederiksen udskriver folketingsvalg: Afholdes 1. november". 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"Decree of the President of Ukraine No. 349/2024 About awarding M. Frederiksen with the Order of Freedom". president.gov.ua (in Ukrainian). ^ Jenvall, Line (22 November 2024). "After breaking with 100-year-old tradition: Mette Frederiksen receives royal order as the first S Prime Minister". dr.dk (in Danish). DR. ^ Lärke Maach, Maja (6 December 2024). "Mette Frederiksen at gala party with order for the first time: 'Truly historical images'". dr.dk (in Danish). DR. ^ Harmony Foundation Presented Mette Frederiksen, Others Mother Teresa Memorial Award https://lightoftruth.in/mother-teresa-award-denmarks-green-initiatives/ https://hwnews.in/national/harmony-foundation-to-present-mette-frederiksen-others-with-mother-teresa-memorial-award-2021-1343054/ ^ "World's Most Powerful Women 2022". Forbes. Archived from the original on 28 November 2023. Retrieved 6 December 2022. ^ "The World's Most Powerful Women 2023". Forbes. 5 December 2023. Archived from the original on 5 December 2023. Retrieved 5 December 2023. ^ Forbes, Moira; McGrath, Maggie (11 December 2024). "The World's Most Powerful Women 2024". Forbes. External links[edit] Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mette Frederiksen. Wikiquote has quotations related to Mette Frederiksen. Official website Biography on the website of the Danish Parliament (Folketinget) Appearances on C-SPAN Political offices Preceded byInger Støjberg Minister of Employment 2011–2014 Succeeded byHenrik Dam Kristensen Preceded byKaren Hækkerup Minister of Justice 2014–2015 Succeeded bySøren Pind Preceded byLars Løkke Rasmussen Leader of the Opposition 2015–2019 Succeeded byLars Løkke Rasmussen Prime Minister of Denmark 2019–present Incumbent Party political offices Preceded byHelle Thorning-Schmidt Leader of the Social Democrats 2015–present Incumbent vtePrime ministers of Denmark Moltke Bluhme Ørsted Bang Andræ Hall Rotwitt Hall Monrad Bluhme Krag-Juel-Vind-Frijs Holstein-Holsteinborg Fonnesbech Estrup Reedtz-Thott Hørring Sehested Deuntzer Christensen Neergaard Holstein-Ledreborg Zahle Berntsen Zahle Liebe Friis Neergaard Stauning Madsen-Mygdal Stauning Buhl Scenius Buhl Kristensen Hedtoft Eriksen Hedtoft Hansen Kampmann Krag Baunsgaard Krag Jørgensen Hartling Jørgensen Schlüter Nyrup Rasmussen Fogh Rasmussen Løkke Rasmussen Thorning-Schmidt Løkke Rasmussen Frederiksen vteEuropean Council List of meetings Parties represented 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 (January–April) 2004 (May–December) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 (January–June) 2013 (July–December) 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 António Costa, President (non-voting) Stocker (AT) De Wever (BE) Zhelyazkov (BG) Plenković (HR) Christodoulides (CY) Babiš (CZ) Frederiksen (DK) Michal (EE) Orpo (FI) Macron (FR) Merz (DE) Mitsotakis (GR) Orbán (HU) Martin (IE) Meloni (IT) Siliņa (LV) Nausėda (LT) Frieden (LU) Abela (MT) Schoof (NL) Tusk (PL) Montenegro (PT) Dan (RO) Fico (SK) Golob (SI) Sánchez (ES) Kristersson (SE) von der Leyen, President of the Commission (non-voting) Kallas (High Representative) (present non-member, non-voting) Metsola (President of the Parliament) (partially attending, non-member, non-voting) European Union Portal vteLeaders of NATO Secretary General: Rutte Albania: Rama Belgium: De Wever Bulgaria: Zhelyazkov Canada: Carney Croatia: Plenković Czech Republic: Babiš Denmark: Frederiksen Estonia: Michal Finland: Orpo France: Macron Germany: Merz Greece: Mitsotakis Hungary: Orbán Iceland: Kristrún Italy: Meloni Latvia: Siliņa Lithuania: Nausėda Luxembourg: Frieden Montenegro: Spajić Netherlands: Schoof North Macedonia: Mickoski Norway: Støre Poland: Tusk Portugal: Montenegro Romania: Dan Slovakia: Fico Slovenia: Golob Spain: Sánchez Sweden: Kristersson Turkey: Erdoğan United Kingdom: Starmer United States: Trump vteCurrent heads of governmentAfrica Algeria: Ghrieb Botswana: Boko Burkina Faso: Ouédraogo* Burundi: Ntahontuye Cameroon: Ngute Cape Verde: Correia e Silva Central African Republic: Moloua Chad: Halina Democratic Republic of the Congo: Suminwa Republic of the Congo: Makosso Djibouti: Mohamed Egypt: Madbouly Equatorial Guinea: Osa Eritrea: Isaias Eswatini: Dlamini Ethiopia: Abiy Gabon: Oligui Nguema Ghana: Mahama Guinea: Oury* Guinea-Bissau: Té Ivory Coast: Beugre Mambe Libya: Dbeibeh Lesotho: Matekane Madagascar: Rajaonarivelo Mali: Maïga* Mauritania: Djay Mauritius: Ramgoolam Morocco: Akhannouch Mozambique: Benvinda Levy Namibia: Ngurare Niger: Zeine Nigeria: Tinubu Rwanda: Nsengiyumva Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic: Bayoun São Tomé and Príncipe: Ramos Senegal: Sonko Sierra Leone: Sengeh Somalia: Barre Somaliland: Abdirahman South Africa: Ramaphosa Sudan: Idris Tanzania: Majaliwa Togo: Gnassingbé Tunisia: Zaafarani Uganda: Nabbanja Asia Afghanistan: Akhund Bahrain: Salman bin Hamad Bangladesh: Yunus* Bhutan: Tobgay Brunei: Hassanal Bolkiah Cambodia: Manet China: Li East Timor: Gusmão Hong Kong: Lee India: Modi Indonesia: Prabowo Iran: Pezeshkian Iraq: Sudani Israel: Netanyahu Japan: Takaichi Jordan: Hassan Kazakhstan: Bektenov Kuwait: Sabah Kyrgyzstan: Kasymaliev Laos: Siphandone Lebanon: Salam Macao: Sam Malaysia: Anwar Mongolia: Zandanshatar Myanmar: Nyo Saw Nepal: Karki North Korea: Pak Oman: Haitham bin Tariq Pakistan: Shehbaz Palestine: Mustafa Philippines: Marcos Qatar: Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Saudi Arabia: Mohammed bin Salman Singapore: Wong South Korea: Lee Sri Lanka: Dissanayake Syria: Al-Sharaa Taiwan: Cho Tajikistan: Rasulzoda Thailand: Anutin United Arab Emirates: Mohammed bin Rashid Uzbekistan: Aripov Vietnam: Phạm Yemen: Mubarak* Europe Abkhazia: Delba* Albania: Rama Andorra: Espot Armenia: Pashinyan Austria: Stocker Azerbaijan: Asadov Belarus: Turchin Belgium: De Wever Bosnia and Herzegovina: Krišto Bulgaria: Zhelyazkov Croatia: Plenković Cyprus: Christodoulides Czech Republic: Babiš Denmark: Frederiksen Estonia: Michal Faroe Islands: Johannesen Finland: Orpo France: Lecornu Georgia: Kobakhidze Germany: Merz Greece: Mitsotakis Hungary: Orbán Iceland: Kristrún Ireland: Martin Italy: Meloni Kosovo: Kurti Latvia: Siliņa Liechtenstein: Haas Lithuania: Ruginienė Luxembourg: Frieden Malta: Abela Moldova: Recean Monaco: Mirmand Montenegro: Spajić Netherlands: Schoof North Macedonia: Mickoski Norway: Støre Poland: Tusk Portugal: Montenegro Romania: Bolojan Russia: Mishustin Serbia: Macut Slovakia: Fico Slovenia: Golob South Ossetia: Dzhussoev Spain: Sánchez Sweden: Kristersson Switzerland: Keller-Sutter, Parmelin, Cassis, Rösti, Baume-Schneider, Jans, and Pfister Transnistria: Rozenberg Turkey: Erdoğan Ukraine: Svyrydenko United Kingdom: Starmer Vatican City: Leo XIV North America Aruba: Eman Anguilla: Richardson-Hodge Antigua and Barbuda: Browne Bahamas: Dis Barbados: Mottley Belize: Briceño Bermuda: Burt British Virgin Islands: Wheatley Canada: Carney Cayman Islands: Ebanks Cuba: Marrero Cruz Curaçao: Pisas Dominica: Skerrit Dominican Republic: Abinader El Salvador: Bukele Greenland: Nielsen Grenada: Mitchell Guatemala: Arévalo Haiti: Fils-Aimé* Jamaica: Holness Mexico: Sheinbaum Montserrat: Meade Saint Kitts and Nevis: Drew Saint Lucia: Pierre Saint Vincent and the Grenadines: Friday Trinidad and Tobago: Persad-Bissessar United States: Trump South America Argentina: Milei Bolivia: Paz Brazil: Lula Chile: Boric Colombia: Petro Ecuador: Noboa Guyana: Ali Paraguay: Peña Peru: Jerí Suriname: Santokhi Uruguay: Orsi Venezuela: Maduro Oceania Australia: Albanese Cook Islands: Brown Fiji: Rabuka Nauru: Adeang New Zealand: Luxon Niue: Tagelagi Papua New Guinea: Marape Samoa: Mataʻafa Solomon Islands: Manele Tonga: Fakafānua Tuvalu: Teo Vanuatu: Napat Asterisk (*) indicate an acting head of government · Italics indicate a head of government of non-UN member state vteParty of European SocialistsEuropean Parliament group: Progressive Alliance of Socialists and DemocratsPartiesMember states SPÖ PS V BSP/БСП SDP EDEK/ΕΔΕΚ SOCDEM A SDE SDP PS / PP SPD PA.SO.K./ΠΑ.ΣΟ.Κ. DK MSZP Lab PD PSI Saskaņa LSDP LSAP PL PvdA NL PS PSD SD PSOE SAP Member parties (non-EU) AP Lab SDLP Associated parties (EU) PBSD/БСДП Hlas-SD Associated parties (non-EU) PS SDP BiH S VV DPS SDP SDSM/СДСМ DS SP/PS CHP DEM Party Observer parties (EU) LSDSP Observer parties (non-EU) PS ARF ESDP/الديمقراطي Dem PDM USPT CTP Fatah/فتح PSD SSP FDTL Former observer parties (non-EU) GD Presidents Wilhelm Dröscher Robert Pontillon Joop den Uyl Vítor Constâncio Guy Spitaels Willy Claes Rudolf Scharping Robin Cook Poul Nyrup Rasmussen Sergey Stanishev Stefan Löfven Leaders in the European Parliament Guy Mollet Hendrik Fayat Pierre Lapie Willi Birkelbach Käte Strobel Francis Vals Georges Spénale Ludwig Spénale Ernest Glinne Rudi Arndt Jean-Pierre Cot Pauline Green Enrique Barón Martin Schulz Hannes Swoboda Gianni Pittella Udo Bullmann Iratxe García European Commissioners (2024–2029) Glenn Micallef (Intergenerational Fairness, Youth, Culture, and Sport) Dan Jørgensen (Energy and Housing) Roxana Mînzatu (Executive VP for Skills, Education and Culture, Quality Jobs, and Social Rights) Teresa Ribera (Executive VP for Clean, Just and Competitive Transition) Maroš Šefčovič (Trade and Economic Security, Interinstitutional Relations, and Transparency) see Von der Leyen Commission II Heads of government Mette Frederiksen (Denmark) Inga Ruginienė (Lithuania) Robert Abela (Malta) Pedro Sánchez (Spain) Keir Starmer (United Kingdom) Heads of state Frank-Walter Steinmeier (Germany) George Vella (Malta) Zoran Milanović (Croatia) vteMembers of the Folketingvte2022–2026Social Democrats (Socialdemokratiet)Aas • Auken • Baaring • Bødskov • Bramsen • Brandenborg • Bruus • Durhuus • Dybvad • Engelbrecht • Fabricius • Frederiksen • Gaardsted* • Gjerskov • Halsboe-Jørgensen • Heunicke • Hummelgaard • Husted • Hækkerup • L. Jensen • M. Jensen • T. Jensen • Joel • Jørgensen • Kjær • Kollerup • Krag • Kronberg • Langhoff • Laustsen • Larsen • Larsson* • Lind • Madsen • Møller • Monberg • Mortensen • Paulin • Petersen • Prehn • Powers • Reissmann • Roug • Tesfaye • Rosenkrantz-Theil • Skriver • Skriver Jensen • Stoklund • Vad • Vind • Wammen • Wermelin • Wibroe*Liberal Party (Venstre)Andersen • Bach‡ • Bank* • Bjerre • Bonnesen • Dahlin • Danielsen • Elholm • Ellemann • Ellemann-Jensen • Gade • Henriksen • Aastrup Jensen • Jensen • Jørgensen • Juel-Jensen • Lilleholt • Løhde • Matthiesen • Melson • Pedersen • Poulsen • Schmidt • Søgaard-Lidell • Valentin*Moderates (Moderaterne)Elmstrøm • Engel-Schmidt • Eriksen • Frandsen • Gotfredsen • Hansen • He • Kierkgaard • Klarskov • Liltorp • Lund-Nielsen • Rasmussen • Rona* • Rubin • SøeSocialist People's Party (Socialistisk Folkeparti)Agersnap • Andersen • Bech-Nielsen • Andersen • Berthelsen • Bigum • Astrid Carøe • Lorentzen • Dyhr • Karsten Hønge • Lippert • Mark • Munk • Mølbæk • ValentinDenmark Democrats (Danmarksdemokraterne)Adsbøl • Andersen‡ • Bech • Bøgsted • Dahl • Espersen • Flydtkjær • Fuglede‡ • Harpsøe • Jessen • Kastbjerg • Munch • Petersen • Skaarup • Skibby • StøjbergLiberal Alliance (Liberal Alliance)Andersen* • Andresen • Bach • Brask • Brown • Dahl • Daugaard • Frølund • Jakobsen • Larsen • Meilvang • Olesen • Ryle • Skalvig • Vanopslagh • Vermund‡Conservative People's Party (Konservative Folkeparti)Abildgaard • Bertelsen • Bonnesen • Hansen • Jarlov • Jerkel • Juul • Larsen • Mercado • Pape • Raabjerg*Red–Green Alliance (Enhedslisten – De Rød-Grønne)Dragsted • Gottlieb • Hvelplund • Lund • Mach • Rasmussen • Søndergaard • Velásquez • VilladsenSocial Liberal Party (Radikale Venstre)Lidegaard • Lindgreen • Nawa • Nielsen • Robsøe • Rod • StampeThe Alternative (Alternativet)Gejl • Rosenkilde • Olumeko • Brydensholt • FaxeDanish People's Party (Dansk Folkeparti)Ahrendtsen • Kjærsgaard • Kofod • Messerschmidt • Bjørn‡ • Thiesen‡ • ZimmermannOutside groupAndersen‡ • Christensen‡ • Fonseca‡ • Mathiesen‡ • Scenius‡ • Stephensen‡From the Faroe IslandsSocial Democratic Party (Jnaðarflokkurin)SkaaleUnion Party (Sambandsflokkurin)FalkenbergFrom GreenlandForward (Siumut)Høegh-DamCommunity of the People (Inuit Ataqatigiit)Chemnitz‡ = Elected under a different partyItalic = Left office before end of term* = Entered office after start of termvte2019–2022Social Democrats (Socialdemokraterne)Auken‡ • Bramsen • Brandenborg • Bruus • Bødskov • Damsbo-Andersen • Dybvad • Engelbrecht • Fabricius • Frederiksen • Gjerskov • Halsboe-Jørgensen • H • Heunicke • Hummelgaard • Hækkerup • Jakobsen • L. Jensen • M. Jensen • T. Jensen • Joel • Johansen • Jørgensen • Kjær • Kollerup • Krag • Kristensen • Kronborg • Langhoff • H. Larsen • M. Larsen • Larsson • Laustsen • Lind • Madsen • Mortensen • Møller • Paulin • Petersen • Prehn • Rasmussen • Rn • Rosenkrantz-Theil • Roug • Skovsby • Stoklund • Tesfaye • Vind • Wammen • WermelinLiberals (Venstre)Ahlers • Ambo-Rasmussen • Andersen • Bank • Bjerre • Bonnesen • Dahlin • Danielsen • Elholm • Ellemann • Ellemann-Jensen • Frederiksen • Fuglede • Geertsen • Hansen • Heitmann • Henriksen • Haarder • J. Jensen • K. Jensen • M. Jensen • Juel-Jensen • Jørgensen • Kissmeyer • Knuth • Lauritzen • Lilleholt • Lorentzen • Løhde • Matthiesen • Melson • Mikkelsen • Nørby • Pedersen • Poulsen • Rasmussen • Schmidt • Tørnæs • Valentin • Øktem • ØstergaardDanish People's Party (Dansk Folkeparti)Adsbøl • Ahrendtsen • Bech • Blixt • Bøgsted • Christensen • J. Dahl • K. Dahl • Dencker • Espersen • Flydtkjær • Kjærsgaard • Krarup • Messerschmidt • Skaarup • SkibbySocialist People's Party (Socialistisk Folkeparti)Andersen • Bech-Nielsen • Berthelsen • Carøe • Dehnhardt • Dyhr • Hønge • Mark • Munk • Mølbæk • Nordqvist‡ • Oguz • Strøjer-Schmidt • Torp • ValentinSocial Liberal Party (Radikale Venstre)Amini • Callesen • Hegaard • Jelved • Kronborg • Lidegaard • Lindgreen • Nielsen • Olldag • Petersen • Robsøe • Rod • Stampe • Steenberg • Thorholm • ØstergaardRed-Green Alliance (Enhedslisten)Flyvholm • Gottlieb • Hvelplund • Hyllested • Juhl • Rosa Lund • Rune Lund • Rasmussen • Skipper • Sølvhøj • Søndergaard • Velásquez • VilladsenConservative People's Party (Konservative Folkeparti)Abildgaard • Ammitzbøll • Bager‡ • Bergman • Hansen • Jarlov • Jerkel • Juul • Knuth‡ • Larsen • Mercado • PoulsenThe New Right (Nye Borgerlige)Christensen • Mathiesen • Thiesen • VermundLiberal Alliance (Liberal Alliance)Dahl • Olesen • VanopslaghIndependent Greens (Frie Grønne)Elbæk‡ • Siddique‡ • Zimmer‡The Alternative (Alternativet)GejlChristian Democrats (Kristendemokraterne)Rohde‡Outside groupAmimitzbøll-Bille‡ • Khader‡ • Rasmussen‡ • Støjberg‡ • Østerby‡From Faroe IslandsSocial Democratic Party (Jnaðarflokkurin)SkaaleUnion Party (Sambandsflokkurin)JoensenFrom GreenlandCommunity of the People (Inuit Ataqatigiit)LarsenForward (Siumut)Høegh-Dam‡ = Elected under a different party.Italic = Left office before end of term.vte2015–2019Social Democrats (Socialdemokraterne)Akdogan • Antorini • Bramsen • Brosbøl • Bødskov • Christensen • Corydon • Damsbo-Andersen • Dybvad • Engelbrecht • Frederiksen • Gjerskov • Gaardsted • Halsboe-Jørgensen • H • Heunicke • Hummelgaard • Hækkerup • Jakobsen • L. Jensen • M. Jensen • T. Jensen • Joel • Johansen • Jørgensen • Klint • Kollerup • Krag • Kristensen • Langhoff • Larsen • Laustsen • Lind • Lunderød • Lykketoft • Madsen • Mortensen • Panduro • Petersen • Prehn • Rasmussen • Rn • Reissmann • Rosenkrantz-Theil • Skovsby • Tesfaye • Thorning-Schmidt • Wammen • WermelinDanish People's Party (Dansk Folkeparti)Adelsteen • Adsbøl • Ahrendtsen • Bech • Bendixen • Berth • Blixt • Bork • Brodersen • Bøgsted • Callesen • Christensen • Christiansen • J. Dahl • K. Dahl • M. H. Dencker • M. Dencker • Due • Eilersen • Espersen • Flydtkjær • Hansen • Harpsøe • Henriksen • Jakobsen • Kjærsgaard • Kofod • Krarup • Langballe • Larsen • Marinus • Messmann • Nødgaard • Ib Poulsen • Skibby • Skaarup • UllemoseLiberals (Venstre)Andersen • Bager • Bonnesen • Danielsen • Elholm • Ellemann • Ellemann-Jensen • Engel-Schmidt • Frederiksen • Gade • Geertsen • Hansen • Heitmann • Henriksen • Holst • Haarder • J. Jensen • K. Jensen • M. Jensen • Juel-Jensen • Jørgensen • Kissmeyer • Knuth • Larsen • Lauritzen • Lilleholt • Lorentzen • Løhde • Løkkegaard • Matthiesen • Nørby • Pedersen • Pind • Poulsen • Rasmussen • Schmidt • StøjbergLiberal Alliance (Liberal Alliance)Ammitzbøll-Bille • Bach • Bock • Christensen • Dahl • Egelund • Kattrup • Lindahl • Mikkelsen • Olesen • Olsen • Riisager • SamuelsenRed-Green Alliance (Enhedslisten)Brix • Dragsted • Flyvholm • Gjerding • Hyllested • Juhl • Lund • Rasmussen • Schmidt-Nielsen • Skipper • Sølvhøj • Søndergaard • Sørensen • Villumsen • VilsholmThe Alternative (Alternativet)Elbæk • Fock • Gade • Gejl • Grantzau • Maier • Matthisen • Nordqvist • Poll • Sandbæk • Schnoor‡Social Liberal Party (Radikale Venstre)Auken • Jelved • Lidegaard • Nielsen • Rod • Stampe • Steenberg • ØstergaardSocialist People's Party (Socialistisk Folkeparti)Andersen • Bech-Nielsen • Dahl • Dyhr • Hønge • Mark • Nielsen • TorpConservative People's Party (Konservative Folkeparti)Abildgaard • Jarlov • Jerkel • Khader • Mercado • Mikkelsen • PoulsenFrom Faroe IslandsRepublic (Tjóðveldi)Arge • HoydalSocial Democratic Party (Jnaðarflokkurin)SkaaleFrom GreenlandDescendants of our Country (Nunatta Qitornai)Hammond‡Community of the People (Inuit Ataqatigiit)Larsen‡ = Elected under a different partyItalic = Left office before end of termvte2011–2015Social Democrats (Socialdemokraterne)Akdogan • Andersen • Antorini • Auken‡ • Bjerregaard • Bramsen • Brosbøl • Bruus • Bødskov • Corydon • Damsbo-Andersen • Engelbrecht • Frederiksen • Gjerskov • Gaardsted • Halsboe-Jørgensen • C. Hansen • T. Hansen • H • Heunicke • K. Hækkerup • N. Hækkerup • O. Hækkerup • L. Jensen • M. Jensen • T. Jensen • Joel • Johansen • Klint • Kofod • Kollerup • Krag‡ • Kristensen • Langhoff • Larsen • Laustsen • Lind • Lund • Lykketoft • Mortensen • Panduro • Paulsen • Petersen‡ • Prehn • Rn • Reissmann • Rosenkrantz-Theil • Sina • Skovsby • Sohn‡ • Thorning-Schmidt • WammenLiberals (Venstre)H. Andersen • K. Andersen • Bech • Bonnesen • J. Christensen • P. Christensen • Christiansen • Danielsen • Elholm • Ellemann-Jensen • Ellemann • Engel-Schmidt • Frederiksen • Friis • Geertsen • Hansen • Heitmann • Henriksen • Hornbech • Høegh • Haarder • J. Jensen • K. Jensen • M. Jensen • Jespersen • Josefsen • Juel-Jensen • Jørgensen • E. Larsen • F. Larsen • Lauritzen • Lilleholt • Lorentzen • Løhde • Matthiesen • Nedergaard • Nonbo • Nørby • Pedersen • Pind • Poulsen • Rasmussen • Rørvig • Schmidt • Støjberg • Thoning • Thranum • Tørnæs • Vesselbo • ØktemDanish People's Party (Dansk Folkeparti)Adelsteen • Adsbøl • Ahrendtsen • Blixt • Bøgsted • A. Christensen • R. Christensen • Christiansen • J. Dahl • K. Dahl • M. H. Dencker • M. Dencker • Dohrmann • Espersen • Flydtkjær • Henriksen • Kjærsgaard • Krarup • Langballe • Marinus • Nødgaard • Skibby • SkaarupSocial Liberal Party (Radikale Venstre)Andersen • Bach • Farooq • Hansen • Hersom • Jacobsen • Jelved • Loklindt • Mikkelsen • Mølvig • Nielsen • Petersen • Rod • Sareen • Stampe • Steenberg • Vestager • ØstergaardSocialist People's Party (Socialistisk Folkeparti)Andersen • Bagge • Bech-Nielsen • Baastrup • Cekic • Dahl • Dehnhardt • Dyhr • Gade • Mach • Nielsen • Søvndal • VilhelmsenRed-Green Alliance (Enhedslisten)Arbo-Bæhr • Brix • Clausen • Dohn • Hyllested • Juhl • Lund • Schmidt-Nielsen • Skipper • Sørensen • Villumsen • AaenLiberal Alliance (Liberal Alliance)Ammitzbøll-Bille • Bock • Christensen • Frank • Mikkelsen • Olesen • Olsen • Riisager • SamuelsenConservative People's Party (Konservative Folkeparti)Barfoed • Behnke • Dyremose • Espersen • Kiær • Legarth • Mercado • Mikkelsen • Møller • RugholmThe Alternative (Alternativet)ElbækFrom Faroe IslandsSocial Democratic Party (Jnaðarflokkurin)SkaaleUnion Party (Sambandsflokkurin)JoensenFrom GreenlandCommunity of the People (Inuit Ataqatigiit)OlsvigForward (Siumut)Jakobsen‡ = Elected under a different partyItalic = Left office before end of termvte2007–2011Liberals (Venstre)Andersen • Bech • Bisgaard • Bonnesen • P. Christensen • T. Christensen • Christiansen • Elholm • Ellemann • Frederiksen • Gade • Hansen • Holberg • Hornbech • Hvilshøj • Høegh • Haarder • J. Jensen • K. Jensen • M. Jensen • Jespersen • Josefsen • Juel-Jensen • Kirk • Larsen • Lauritzen • Lilleholt • Lorentzen • Løhde • Møller • Nedergaard • Nonbo • Nørby • M. Pedersen • T. Pedersen • T. S. Pedersen • Pind • Poulsen • A. Rasmussen • L. Rasmussen • Rudiengaard • Rørvig • Sander • Schmidt • Støjberg • Thoning • Tørnæs • Vesselbo • Vibjerg • Aamund‡Social Democrats (Socialdemokraterne)Adelskov • Akdogan • P. Andersen • S. Andersen • Antorini • Auken • Björnsson • Brosbøl • Bødskov • Christensen • Damsbo-Andersen • Engelbrecht • Frederiksen • Gjerskov • Gre • C. Hansen • L. Hansen • T. Hansen • H • Heunicke • Husted • Karen Hækkerup • Klaus Hækkerup • N. Hækkerup • O. Hækkerup • L. Jensen • M. Jensen • T. Jensen • Klint • Kofod • Kristensen • Larsen • Laustsen • Lund • Lykketoft • Meldgaard • F. Mortensen • K. Mortensen • Møller • Panduro • Paulsen • Prehn • Rademacher • Seelen • Sindal • Skovsby • Sohn • Thorning-Schmidt • VernersenDanish People's Party (Dansk Folkeparti)Adelsteen • Blixt • Brix • Brodersen • Bøgsted • Camre • A. Christensen • R. Christensen • Christiansen • Dahl • Dalgaard • Dencker • Dohrmann • Espersen • Falkenberg • Harpsøe • Henriksen • Kjærsgaard • Knakkergaard • Krarup • Langballe • Messerschmidt • Nødgaard • Petersen • Poulsen • Skibby • SkaarupSocialist People's Party (Socialistisk Folkeparti)Agersnap • Andersen • Auken • Bagge • Bonne • Bornhøft • Baastrup • Cekic • Dahl • Dehnhardt • Dyhr • Frahm • Fuglsang • Gade • Holmsgaard • Hønge • Jensen • Krag • Nielsen • Petersen • Qureshi • Søvndal • TouborgConservative People's Party (Konservative Folkeparti)Barfoed • Behnke • Bendtsen • Christensen • Dyremose • Espersen • Hedegaard • Jarlov • Khader‡ • Kier • Kjær • Kristensen • Leegaard • Legarth • Lundsgaard • Mikkelsen • H. Møller • P. Møller • Nielsen • Rasmussen • Rugholm • SjelleSocial Liberal Party (Radikale Venstre)Andersen • Dahl • Dybkjær • Jelved • M. Petersen • N. Petersen • Johannes Poulsen • Jørgen Poulsen‡ • Vestager • ØstergaardLiberal Alliance (Liberal Alliance)Ammitzbøll-Bille‡ • Christensen • Høiby • SamuelsenRed-Green Alliance (Enhedslisten)Barfod • Clausen • Schmidt-Nielsen • AaenChristian Democrats (Kristendemokraterne)Jørgensen‡Outside groupChristmas-Møller‡ • Hansen‡ • Seeberg‡From Faroe IslandsRepublic (Tjóðveldi)HoydalUnion Party (Sambandsflokkurin)JoensenFrom GreenlandCommunity of the People (Inuit Ataqatigiit)HenningsenForward (Siumut)Johansen‡ = Elected under a different party.Italic = Left office before end of term. Authority control databases InternationalISNIVIAFGNDWorldCatNationalUnited StatesPoland

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