Once the electoral stalemate ends, Prime Minister Frederiksen will likely continue to accommodate President Trump’s aspirations for Greenland.
Published June 1, 2026
Mette Frederiksen, leader of the Danish Social Democratic Party, announced that she has agreed to form a centre-left minority government, securing her third consecutive term as prime minister.
The breakthrough announced on Monday ends more than two months of political deadlock after a deeply divided general election in March. The next cabinet will come to power amid an immediate diplomatic crisis with the United States over the future of Greenland.
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The agreement to form a government came after more than 60 days of political negotiations involving 12 political parties. A brief failed attempt by the center-right Freedom Party to form a rival government cleared the way for Frederiksen to eventually form a minority government.
“I went to see His Majesty the King and announced that after long negotiations we can form a government,” Frederiksen told reporters in Copenhagen.
But the 48-year-old prime minister faces a highly precarious situation. In the March 24 election, voters dissatisfied with the lingering cost of living crisis stripped his former centrist coalition of its majority.
Her Social Democratic Party’s representation in the 179-seat parliament fell from 50 to 38, its lowest ranking since 1903.
But the toughest challenge for the returning prime minister will be tensions between Copenhagen and Washington over Greenland. Greenland has escalated following US President Donald Trump’s threat to annex the autonomous Danish territory.
Mr Frederiksen firmly rejected any suggestion that Denmark would cede sovereignty, saying a US occupation would “herald the end of NATO”.
A central challenge for the Greenlandic regime will be to overcome strategic conflicts over the future of Greenland’s defenses, vast mineral wealth, and operations of the US Pitafik space station in the northwest of the territory.
Beyond the Greenland conflict, the new government faces a rapidly deteriorating security environment in Europe. Frederiksen’s immediate duties include managing the build-up of Denmark’s military defense capabilities, driven primarily by Russia’s ongoing war in Ukraine.
Under her stewardship, Denmark has already rapidly increased defense spending to more than 3% of gross domestic product (GDP) and taken historic steps to expand military conscription to women.

