2005 Danish general election

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2005 Danish general election
Kingdom of Denmark
← 2001 8 February 2005 2007 →

All 179 seats in the Folketing
90 seats needed for a majority
Turnout84.4%
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Venstre Anders Fogh Rasmussen 29.0% 52 -4
Social Democrats Mogens Lykketoft 25.9% 47 -5
DPP Pia Kjærsgaard 13.3% 24 +2
Conservative Bendt Bendtsen 10.3% 18 +2
Social Liberals Marianne Jelved 9.2% 17 +8
SF Holger K. Nielsen 6.0% 11 -1
Red–Green Collective leadership 3.4% 6 +2
Elected in the Faroe Islands
Republican Høgni Hoydal 25.4% 1 0
People's Anfinn Kallsberg 24.0% 1 +1
Elected in Greenland
Siumut Hans Enoksen 34.3% 1 0
Inuit Ataqatigiit Josef Motzfeldt 25.5% 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Folketingsvalget 2005 - Opstillingskredse.svg
Folketing2005.svg
Prime Minister before Prime Minister-elect
Former Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen at the Nordic Council Session in Helsinki 2008-10-28.jpg Anders Fogh Rasmussen
Venstre
Anders Fogh Rasmussen
Venstre
Former Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen at the Nordic Council Session in Helsinki 2008-10-28.jpg

General elections were held in Denmark on 8 February 2005.[1] Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen's Venstre retained the largest number of seats in parliament. The governing coalition between the Venstre and the Conservative People's Party remained intact, with the Danish People's Party providing the parliamentary support needed for the minority government. The Danish Social Liberal Party made the biggest gains of any party, although it remains outside the governing group of parties. The election marked the second time in a row that the Social Democrats were not the largest party in the parliament, a change from most of the 20th century. The party lost 5 seats and leader Mogens Lykketoft resigned immediately after the election.

The prime minister called the elections on 18 January. He claimed that he would have called it earlier, but the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake which killed a number of Danes delayed it. Rasmussen still had almost a year left in his term, but said he wanted to call the election before municipal elections in November. His reasoning was that he wanted a clear mandate for the municipal and county government restructuring that his government was implementing.

From the last election the governing coalition of Venstre and the Conservative People's Party had 94 of the 175 seats together with the supporting Danish People's Party. This number was unchanged after the 2005 election. Voter turnout was 84.5% in Denmark proper, 73.0% in the Faroe Islands and 59.4% in Greenland.[2] This was the last election in which counties were used as constituencies.

Campaign[]

Venstre campaigned on their municipal restructuring plan, as well as a continuation of the "tax-freeze" and tight immigration requirements. They also promised to see 60,000 jobs created during a second term.

The largest opposition party, the Social Democratic Party led by Mogens Lykketoft focused on employment, which they claim has decreased under the current government.

The Danish People's Party, who support the Venstre–Conservative coalition, criticized the "tax-freeze" but agreed, conditionally, to support it for another parliamentary term. They also wanted increasingly tough immigration restrictions.

Results[]

63 out of the 179 members of the new folketing were newly elected. Although women made up 38% of the total, several women held prominent positions, notably Pia Kjærsgaard, leader of the third largest party, Danish People's Party. Marianne Jelved (leader of the Danish Social Liberal Party), Connie Hedegaard (Minister of the Environment), Pernille Rosenkrantz-Theil (front figure of Enhedslisten) and Helle Thorning-Schmidt (later elected as leader of Social Democrats) were other important woman in the parliament. A couple of parties, including the Social Democrats were holding leadership races, which might have been won by women. 9 of the top 20 candidates, in terms of personal votes, were women.

2005 Danish Folketing.svg
Denmark proper
Party Votes % Seats +/–
Venstre 974,636 29.0 52 –4
Social Democratic Party 867,349 25.8 47 –5
Danish People's Party 444,947 13.3 24 +2
Conservative People's Party 344,886 10.3 18 +2
Danish Social Liberal Party 308,212 9.2 17 +8
Socialist People's Party 201,047 6.0 11 –1
Red-Green Alliance 114,123 3.4 6 +2
Christian Democrats 58,071 1.7 0 –4
Centre Democrats 33,880 1.0 0 0
Minority Party 8,850 0.3 0 New
Independents 1,211 0.0 0 0
Invalid/blank votes 27,348
Total 3,384,560 100 175 0
Faroe Islands
Republican Party 6,301 25.4 1 0
People's Party 5,967 24.0 1 +1
Social Democratic Party 5,518 22.2 0 0
Union Party 5,333 21.5 0 –1
Centre Party 829 3.3 0 New
Self-Government Party 585 2.4 0 0
Independents 309 1.2 0 New
Invalid/blank votes 94
Total 24,936 100 2 0
Greenland
Siumut 7,761 34.3 1 0
Inuit Ataqatigiit 5,774 25.5 1 0
Democrats 4,909 21.7 0 New
Atassut 3,374 14.9 0 0
Independents 841 3.7 0 0
Invalid/blank votes 457
Total 23,516 100 2 0
Source: Nohlen & Stöver

Aftermath[]

Following the election, Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen reformed his liberal-conservative cabinet as the Cabinet of Anders Fogh Rasmussen II with parliamentary support from Danish People's Party.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Dieter Nohlen & Philip Stöver (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p525 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
  2. ^ Nohlen & Stöver, p550

Further reading[]

External links[]

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