Comprehensive report: The difficult process of forming the Danish government in 2026

This report from Denmark 24 highlights the most significant events on the Danish political scene since the announcement of the parliamentary election results shortly before midnight on Tuesday, March 24, 2026, up to the time of writing. It details the key developments in the power struggles led by Lars Løkke Rasmussen and the maneuvers of Morten Messerschmitt. While there are many stories about the parties and elected members of the Danish parliament, this report focuses on the most important events that directly impact the formation of the new Danish government.

First: The results of the March 24 elections: a political earthquake and a fragmentation of seats

The ballot boxes produced a complex parliamentary map that made it impossible to form a single-party government or even a simple two-party coalition.

Second: The “Royal Investigator” tour, March 26, 2026:

Two days after the elections, the party leaders headed to meet King Frederick X in what is known as the “Kongerunde,” i.e., the King’s meeting tour, and this is where the first turning point occurred:

Third: Starting negotiations with the Red parties and the Moderate Party, and warning the Moderate leader, Lucke.

Lars Løkke Rasmussen not only withheld his recommendation of Mette Frederiksen to be the Royal Inquiry, but also issued a warning to Frederiksen nearly two weeks into government negotiations with the Red parties, stating: “You cannot count on our votes to form a purely Red government.” Therefore:

Fourth: “Red Mass” reactions (SF and radical phenestra)

This shift to the right created a major rift:

Fifth: Parliamentary splits: The new “independents”

During the period following the elections and with the negotiations stalled, the phenomenon of defections began:

Sixth: The latest development: Morten Messerschmitt's strike

A short while ago, according to TV2, Morten Messerschmitt (leader of the Danish People's Party, DF) announced a strategic move: his decision to appoint himself Vice-President of the Danish Parliament (Folketingets Præsidium). Messerschmitt told TV2, "While Mette Frederiksen and Lars Løkke are manipulating the country's future behind closed doors, I will be in the presidency of Parliament to stand as a guardian of the Constitution and prevent the passage of any laws that infringe upon Danish sovereignty or the rights of native citizens." This announcement means that Messerschmitt is leveraging his power within the legislative body to counter any future "centrist" government that he might perceive as weak or compromising on issues of immigration and sovereignty.

Seventh: Where does Denmark stand today?
More than two weeks later:

  1. Mette Frederiksen: A “royal investigator” caught between the hammer of Lars Løkke (who wants a center-right government) and the anvil of the SF (who threatens to bring her down if she goes to the right).
  2. Lars Løkke Rasmussen: He appears to be the de facto controller of the negotiations, using his influence to break the socialist hegemony.
  3. Parliament: Uncertainty prevails as the number of independent MPs increases.

The scene is now suspended, awaiting either Mette Frederiksen’s success in forming a government despite all the challenges she faces, or her failure to form a government and her admission of this, which may open the door to the appointment of a new “royal inquisitor,” possibly Lars Løkke Rasmussen himself, who has so far maintained open channels with parties from the right and left, and in the worst-case scenario – which seems unlikely at the time of preparing this report – holding entirely new elections.

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