First female PM elected in Denmark

Centre-left coalition squeaks by incumbents in tight race

by macleans.ca on Friday, September 16, 2011 11:35am - 2 Comments

A centre-left coalition has won a tight election in Denmark, giving the Scandinavian country its first female prime minister and quashing the decade-long rule of the centre-right. After counting 90 per cent of the votes, media declared a victory for the centre-left coalition, known as the red bloc, led by Helle Thorning-Schmidt’s Social Democratic Party. “We’ve written history today,” said Thorning-Schmidt said. The major issue in the election was the economy, with contenders putting forward different visions of how to tax and spend in the nation of 5.5 million. Thorning-Schmidt promised to raise taxes on Denmark’s banks and wealthiest citizens in order to finance a US$4 billion expansion of the welfare state and improve education and health care. By midnight Thursday, Thorning-Schmidt’s coalition had 89 seats, while the centre-right had 86.

The New York Times

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  • Anonymous

    Congratulations to the winner and all the participants.  Where would we be without people to step forward and volunteer to be abused by the press.  No wait, I didn’t mean that. 

    However, I must ask, has anyone ever heard of a winner squeaking by the incumbent in a loose race?  

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_FZDNFEUE6QTOIR5ZEFMWDXVKKA Adam R.

    It must be the Moslems, they’re trying to impose a leftist agenda on Europe now.

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