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Denmark’s centre-right coalition talks break down, prolonging political deadlock

By Thomson Reuters May 22, 2026 | 12:34 PM

COPENHAGEN, May 22 (Reuters) – Denmark’s acting Defence Minister Troels Lund Poulsen’s attempt to form a centre-right ​government broke down on Friday, ‌he said, prolonging a post-election stalemate in the Nordic country’s parliament.

A March election resulted in a fragmented assembly of 12 parties, ‌with ​Prime Minister Mette ⁠Frederiksen resigning after her ⁠Social Democrats remained the largest party but suffered their worst election result since 1903.

Poulsen, leader of the ​right-wing Liberal Party, had been asked by the king to explore ⁠government options after caretaker ⁠Prime Minister Frederiksen’s own ​coalition talks collapsed earlier this month.

He had ​sought to form a government, seeking ‌backing from right-wing parties, but failed to secure support from Lars Lokke Rasmussen’s centrist Moderate Party, which ⁠had abandoned talks with Frederiksen and proposed that Poulsen be given the task.

Denmark’s King Frederik ⁠will ‌now hold fresh talks ⁠with party leaders and could ​ask ‌Frederiksen to make another attempt ​at forming ⁠a government, or hand the task to one of the other party leaders.

(Reporting by Stine Jacobsen and Jesus Calero, editing by Terje Solsvik and ​Anna Ringstrom)