Denmark's PM resigns but hopes to form new centrist government
Social Democratic Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen, who narrowly won Tuesday's general election, said she had handed in her resignation to the Queen on Wednesday and will begin exploring a coalition across the political middle.
The talks are however expected to be lengthy as both friends and foes of Frederiksen have expressed scepticism of such a coalition, making the outcome uncertain.
Ìýgovernment is considering sending refugees andÌýÌýto Rwanda for processing in a move similar to the UK's. All major political parties back this policy, and is emblematic of Denmark's harsh anti-immigration stance since the late 1990s.Ìý
The left-leaning bloc, of which Frederiksen's Social Democratic party is a part, got 90 seats,Ìýthe slimmest possible majority in the 179-seat parliament, while the right-wing bloc got 72 seats and a newly formed centrist party secured 16.
Frederiksen had campaigned on the need for a broad coalition across the traditional left-right divide, arguing that political unity is needed at a time of international uncertainty.Ìý
(Reuters, °®Âþµº Staff)