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Red–Green Alliance (Denmark)

The Red–Green Alliance[14][15] or Unity List[16][17][18] (Danish: Enhedslisten – De Rød-Grønne,[19] lit.'The Unity List – The Red–Greens', EL) is an eco-socialist political party in Denmark.[4] It was founded in 1989 with the merger of three Marxist parties[20] and it is the furthest left-wing party in the Danish parliament, where it advocates for an expansion of welfare and social justice as well as socialist transformation in Denmark and internationally.[21] During the 2021 Danish municipal elections the party placed first in the Danish capital Copenhagen, with 24.6% of the votes.[22] The party is also active in various Danish trade unions.[21][23]

Red–Green Alliance
Enhedslisten – De Rød-Grønne
AbbreviationØ
LeaderCollective leadership
Political spokespersonMai Villadsen
Founded2 December 1989
Merger ofLeft Socialists
Communist Party of Denmark
Socialist Workers Party
Communist Workers Party independents
HeadquartersStudiestræde 24, 1 1455 København K
Youth wingNone (cooperating with RGU and SUF)
Membership (2021) 9,398[1]
Ideology
Political positionLeft-wing[8][9] to far-left[10]
European affiliationMaintenant le Peuple
Party of the European Left
European Anti-Capitalist Left
European Parliament groupThe Left in the European Parliament – GUE/NGL[11]
Nordic affiliationNordic Green Left Alliance
ColoursRed
Folketing
9 / 179
European Parliament
1 / 14
Regions[12]
12 / 205
Municipalities[13]
102 / 2,432
Election symbol
Website
enhedslisten.dk

Political and ideological position

The party describes itself as a socialist and democratic grassroots party, which claims also to represent green politics, peace movement, anti-discrimination, and trade union movement. The party's ideological position is set out in a manifesto from 2014.[21] It proposes that a socialistic society of the future "neither can nor should be described in detail, but rather be developed and shaped by the people living in it". It describes socialism as "an answer to the problems caused by capitalism such as non-sufficient democracy, crises, destruction of nature, inequality, racism and war".[21]

Holding anti-capitalist[6] and soft Eurosceptic[4][24][25] views, about the economic system it says:

A new and actually democratic system of society requires fundamental changes in the ownership of the means of production, such as companies, land and natural resources. Collective forms of ownership will be dominating. We propose that public authorities, co-workers, local communities and other collectives of persons should own and run institutions and companies. ... A democratic economy means a democratic work life as well. The work place should be characterized by democracy, and the employees must have a constitutional right to decisive influence on the organization of work in the workplace.[21]

The Red–Green Alliance recognizes that methods achieving this may differ depending on the course of class struggle, but will eventually require a revolution—one that must be supported by a majority of the population manifested through democratic and free elections.[21] The party often adopts particular views in relation to the other parties in the Folketing and opt out of many of the settlements reached, seen as an expression of class collaboration. Until the conditions for the party's long-term goal are presented, the party will use its seats in parliament to vote for any improvement and against any deterioration of working-class people's lives. In line with this, the party agreed at its national conference in 2010 that if Helle Thorning-Schmidt became Prime Minister after the 2011 election, the party would vote for a "red" budget bill that did not contain obvious flaws.

Policies

Social policy

The party places great emphasis on the fight against social inequality and poverty, and is in favour of strengthening and expanding the welfare state. The party believes there is place in society for all forms of diversity, including gender, sexuality, disability and ethnic background.[26] It also advocates for a larger public sector, among other things, to improve quality of life for public sector employees.[27]

The party believes people should be free to choose when they want to get an education and is opposed to tuition fees, which they believe harm opportunities for everyone to acquire an education.[28] The party does not see unemployment as being equal to laziness and seeks to abolish the Danish equivalent of workfare.[29]

Economic policy

The party is decisively anti-capitalist and has particularly distinguished itself as an opponent of transfer pricing, whereby multinational companies minimise the amount they pay in tax by attributing their profits to countries with lower tax rates.

In response to the Great Recession, the Red–Green Alliance urged stricter control of loans, the introduction of a Tobin tax, and the nationalisation of banks and mortgage companies. It also believes that the public sector must be expanded, the wages of the lowest-paid workers should be raised, and the insurance-based unemployment benefit period should be extended to a minimum of four years. At the same time, students should be given a greater state education grant.[30] At minimum, all benefits should be raised to 13,500 kroner per month before taxes.[29]

Foreign policy

The party advocates for foreign policy based on respect for human rights, which it believes has not been appropriately prioritised in the past. It also proposes greater support for developing countries through a doubling of foreign aid,[31] and campaigns for Denmark's withdrawal from NATO. In March 2019, the party announced it would no longer campaign for a referendum to leave the EU, pointing to Brexit illustrating the need for clarity before withdrawal can be considered.[32]

The party operates on the fundamental belief that peace is preferable to war, and has been opposed from the beginning to Denmark's participation in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. That principle was challenged in 2011, when the party's parliamentary group voted in favour of Danish participation in the UN-sanctioned military action in Libya on the basis that it was a humanitarian action.[33] However, the decision led to significant backlash, and the party's support was pulled back after the military intervention began.[34]

History

 
Election posters, including Red–Green Alliance, at the parliamentary elections in 2007

The party was formed in 1989 as an electoral alliance of three left-wing parties: Left Socialists (VS), Communist Party of Denmark (DKP), and Socialist Workers Party (SAP). Originally the plan was to unite these parties alongside The Greens (De Grønne), Common Course, and Humanist to form a broad-based progressive movement, but this did not materialize.[35] A fourth party, the Communist Workers Party (KAP), succeeded in joining the alliance in 1991, but its involvement was vetoed a year later by DKP.

Prior to the 2007 parliamentary election, the party enlisted Asmaa Abdol-Hamid, a Danish Muslim candidate who identified herself as a feminist, democrat, and socialist.[36] She is endorsed by some imams, opposed by others (including those in Hizb-ut-Tahrir), wears a hijab and will not shake hands with men.[37] These facts, and some of her statements regarding politics and religion, made her the target of some criticism across the political spectrum, particularly from the Danish People's Party. Some left-wing figures cited her candidacy as a reason for withdrawing their support from the party.[38] An anti-religious network was created within the party with the stated goal of turning the party into a solely atheist party with a materialistMarxist basis.[39]

During the campaign, there was some speculation as to whether her candidacy would attract or repel voters.[40][41] The results of the election were 2.2% for the party, down from 3.4% in the 2005 parliamentary elections. Although not elected, Abdol-Hamid maintained that she had attracted voters to the party. The four seats won by the party went to Frank Aaen, Johanne Schmidt-Nielsen, Line Barfod, and Per Clausen.

In the 2011 parliamentary election, the party received 6.7% of the vote and tripled its representation from 4 seats to 12 seats.

The party contested the 2013 local elections on a platform of improving public transport and making greater public investment.[42]

As part of the left-leaning "Red bloc" coalition with the Social Democrats, the Red–Green Alliance accepted the state budget twice and was in opposition twice in the period from 2011 to 2015. But at no point did they report direct opposition to the government. In the 2015 general election, the party received 7.8% of the vote and increased its representation from 12 seats to 14 seats.

Electoral performance

Parliament

Election Votes % Seats +/– Government
1990 54,038 1.7 (#10)
0 / 179
  0 Extra-parliamentary
1994 104,701 3.1 (#7)
6 / 179
  6 Opposition
1998 91,933 2.7 (#8)
5 / 179
  1 External support
2001 82,685 2.4 (#7)
4 / 179
  1 Opposition
2005 114,123 3.4 (#7)
6 / 179
  2 Opposition
2007 74,982 2.2 (#8)
4 / 179
  2 Opposition
2011 236,860 6.7 (#6)
12 / 179
  8 External support
2015 274,463 7.8 (#4)
14 / 179
  2 Opposition
2019 244,664 6.9 (#6)
13 / 179
  1 External support
2022 181,452 5.1 (#8)
9 / 179
  4 Opposition

The distribution of Red–Green Alliance's voters is geographically disparate. While in Nørrebro and Vesterbro districts of Copenhagen, it was the strongest party in the 2015 election, scoring 26.5 and 20.8% respectively (in Bispebjerg it received 22%, placing it only slightly behind the Social Democrats), the party is much more weakly positioned in rural parts of Denmark, taking only an average of 4.5% of votes in Western Jutland with as little as 3.1% in the Ringkøbing district.

Local elections

Municipal elections
Year Seats
# ±
1993
6 / 4,703
New
1997
14 / 4,685
  8
2001
11 / 4,647
  3
Municipal reform
2005
24 / 2,522
  13
2009
14 / 2,468
  10
2013
119 / 2,444
  105
2017
102 / 2,432
  17
2021
114 / 2,436
  12
 
Regional elections
Year Seats
# ±
1993
1 / 374
New
1997
2 / 374
  1
2001
2 / 374
  0
Municipal reform
2005
6 / 205
  4
2009
2 / 205
  4
2013
15 / 205
  13
2017
12 / 205
  3
2021
14 / 205
  2

European Parliament

Prior to 2016, the Red–Green Alliance never directly contested elections to the European Parliament, preferring to support the People's Movement against the EU, a Eurosceptic party whose MEP sits in the European United Left–Nordic Green Left group. Some of the party's MPs were considering running an independent list for the 2014 elections,[43] but this idea was dismissed by a majority on the party's yearly meeting.[44]

In a historic decision in the party's yearly meeting in May 2016, a majority decided to directly contest the 2019 European Parliament election.[45]

Year Group Votes % Seats +/-
2019 GUE/NGL 151,903 5.5 (#7)
1 / 14
N/A

Membership

Year Membership 'Change in Percent
1992 1.082
1993 999 -7.7%
1994 1.093 +9.4%
1995 1.189 +8.8%
1996 1.282 +7.8%
1997 1.479 +15.4%
1998 2.023 +36.8%
1999 1.968 -2.7%
2000 1.945 -1.1%
2001 1.992 +2.4%
2002 2.366 +18.8%
2003 2.321 -1.9%
2004 2.524 +8.7%
2005 3.739 +48.1%
2006 4.127 +10.4%
2007 4.099 -0.7%
2008 4.330 +5.6%
2009 4.373 +1.0%
2010 4.553 +4.1%
2011 7.714 +51.0%
2012 9.385 +21.7%
2013 9.483 +1.0%
2014 9.023 -4.9%
2015 9.504 +5.3%
2016 9.335 -1.8%
2017 9.015 -3.4%
2018 8.936 -3.4%
2019 9.662 +8.1%

Elected representatives

2022 Danish general election

See also

References

  1. ^ Hoffmann-Hansen, Henrik; Nilsson, Simone; Jespersen, Johan Storgaard; Krasnik, Benjamin; Fabricius, Kitte; Schmidt, Mara Malene Raun; Gosmann, Mie Borggreen Winther og Sara Mathilde (3 October 2022). "Overblik: Partierne i Danmark". Kristeligt Dagblad (in Danish). Retrieved 4 January 2023.
  2. ^ "Danish elections 2015: a guide to the parties, candidates and electoral system". the Guardian. 16 June 2015. Retrieved 11 July 2022.
  3. ^ Political and cultural representations of Muslims : Islam in the plural. Christopher Flood. Leiden: Brill. 2012. p. 43. ISBN 978-90-04-23103-0. OCLC 808367020.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  4. ^ a b c d Nordsieck, Wolfram (2019). "Denmark". Parties and Elections in Europe.
  5. ^ "Copenhagen faces backlash over €2.7B 'green' island plan". POLITICO. 15 December 2022.
  6. ^ a b Åsa Bengtsson; Kasper Hansen; Ólafur Þ Harõarson; Hanne Marthe Narud; Henrik Oscarsson (15 November 2013). The Nordic Voter: Myths of Exceptionalism. ECPR Press. p. 204. ISBN 978-1-907301-50-6.
  7. ^ "Enhedslistens topmedlemmer: Hellere EU-kritik indefra end EU-udmeldelse". 11 March 2022.
  8. ^
    • "The left-wing Red-Green Alliance (GUE/NGL) also look like they will make no significant gains in the election despite taking their first ever seat in the European Parliament last week, won from the left-wing People's Movement Against the EU (GUE/NGL)". Europe Elects. 1 June 2019.
    • "Danish left-wing party changes stance on EU membership referendum". The Local dk. 15 March 2019.
    • "Fourth party leader states intentions to become Danish PM". The Local dk. 16 August 2018. Pernille Skipper, lead spokesperson with the left-wing Red-Green Alliance (Enhedslisten) party, has said she intends to run as a prime ministerial candidate at Denmark’s next general election.
    • Jensen, Teis (24 June 2016). "Danish government-allied populists call for EU vote, PM rejects". Reuters. Retrieved 5 October 2019.
  9. ^ Imagining the Peoples of Europe – populist discourses across the political spectrum. Edited by Jan Zienkowski and Ruth Breeze. p. 149. Chapter 6. Chapter author – Óscar García Agustín. Published by John Benjamins Publishing Company in 2019. Retrieved via Google Books.
  10. ^
    • March, Luke (2008). Contemporary Far Left Parties in Europe (PDF). Berlin: Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung. p. 3. ISBN 978-3-86872-000-6.
    • Edwards, Geoffrey; Georg Wiessala (2000). The European Union: annual review 1998/1999. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 184. ISBN 978-0-631-21598-1.
    • Banks, Arthur S.; Thomas C. Muller (1995). Political Handbook of the World 1994–95. CSA Publications. p. 234. ISBN 978-0-933199-10-1.
    • Government and opposition, Volume 34. Weidenfeld and Nicolson. 1999. p. 73.
  11. ^ "Enhedslisten-GUE/NGL".
  12. ^ "AKVA3: Valg til regions råd efter område, parti og stemmer/kandidater/køn". Statistics Denmark. Retrieved 13 June 2010.
  13. ^ "VALGK3: Valg til kommunale råd efter område, parti og stemmer/kandidater/køn". Statistics Denmark. Retrieved 13 June 2010.
  14. ^ Boffey, Daniel (3 March 2021). "Denmark under pressure to drop plans to work with Israel on vaccines". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 April 2021.
  15. ^ Skydsgaard, Nikolaj (20 April 2020). "Denmark blocks firms registered in tax-havens from state aid". Reuters. Retrieved 3 April 2021.
  16. ^ "Denmark passes legislation to strip ISIL fighters of citizenship". Al Jazeera. 24 October 2019. Retrieved 3 April 2021.
  17. ^ Meret, Susi; Beyer Gregersen, Andreas (24 July 2019). "Islam as a "floating signifier": Right-wing populism and perceptions of Muslims in Denmark". Brookings Institution. Retrieved 3 April 2021.
  18. ^ Thomassen, Lasse (5 June 2015). "Is there an Alternative for Denmark?". openDemocracy. Retrieved 3 April 2021.
  19. ^ Gemma Loomes (17 June 2013). Party Strategies in Western Europe: Party Competition and Electoral Outcomes. Routledge. pp. 201–. ISBN 978-1-136-59303-1. Retrieved 31 July 2013.
  20. ^ "Enhedslistens historie". Enhedslisten. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  21. ^ a b c d e f "Enhedslistens principprogram". Enhedslisten. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  22. ^ "Kommunalvalget, Resultater i København". kmdvalg.dk (in Danish).
  23. ^ Jacobsen, Louis (11 November 2019). "Fagbevægelsen skal være politisk, men ikke partipolitisk". Information (in Danish).
  24. ^ "The UK and Denmark: Growing public euroscepticism".
  25. ^ "EU-politik". enhedslisten.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 7 March 2015.
  26. ^ "Plads til alle". Enhedslisten. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  27. ^ . Enhedslisten. Archived from the original on 10 June 2015. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  28. ^ . Enhedslisten. Archived from the original on 10 June 2015. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  29. ^ a b "Ulighed og fattigdom". Enhedslisten. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  30. ^ . Archived from the original on 17 July 2010. Retrieved 20 November 2013.
  31. ^ Enhedslisten på Folketingets hjemmeside
  32. ^ Hvass, Jesper; Rytgaard, Nikolaj (15 March 2019). "Enhedslisten parkerer krav om dansk udmeldelse af EU efter britisk kaos". Jyllands-Posten (in Danish). Retrieved 15 March 2019.
  33. ^ . Enhedslisten. Archived from the original on 10 June 2015. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  34. ^ Oliver Routhe Skov og Turi Kjestine Meyhoff (30 March 2011). "Enhedslisten trækker støtten til Libyen-krigen". Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  35. ^ "Enhedslistens historie". Enhedslisten. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  36. ^ "Feminist, socialist, devout Muslim: woman who has thrown Denmark into turmoil". The Guardian. 16 May 2007. Retrieved 20 November 2013.
  37. ^ Imamer anbefaler Asmaa, Kristeligt Dagblad, 1 May 2007
  38. ^ Kære Asmaa, Information, 1 September 2007
  39. ^ Religionskrig hos Enhedslisten[permanent dead link], aalborg.dk, 20 September 2007
  40. ^ Asmaa kan sprænge Enh's partiliste i København 4 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Politiken, 2 November 2007
  41. ^ Ekspert: Asmaa har skræmt marxisterne 3 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Politiken, 1 November 2007
  42. ^ "Party profile: Enhedslisten". 9 November 2013. Retrieved 20 November 2013.
  43. ^ "Red–Green Alliance puts pressure to People's Movement Against the EU". Ekstra Bladet (in Danish). 27 March 2013. Retrieved 21 May 2016.
  44. ^ "Red–Green Alliance scraps EU election run". Berlingske (in Danish). 27 April 2013. Retrieved 21 May 2016.
  45. ^ "Red–Green Alliance will run independently in the next European Parliament election" (in Danish). Danmarks Radio. 15 May 2016. Retrieved 21 May 2016.

External links

  • (in Danish) Official website
  • (in English) Official website

green, alliance, denmark, green, alliance, unity, list, danish, enhedslisten, rød, grønne, unity, list, greens, socialist, political, party, denmark, founded, 1989, with, merger, three, marxist, parties, furthest, left, wing, party, danish, parliament, where, . The Red Green Alliance 14 15 or Unity List 16 17 18 Danish Enhedslisten De Rod Gronne 19 lit The Unity List The Red Greens EL is an eco socialist political party in Denmark 4 It was founded in 1989 with the merger of three Marxist parties 20 and it is the furthest left wing party in the Danish parliament where it advocates for an expansion of welfare and social justice as well as socialist transformation in Denmark and internationally 21 During the 2021 Danish municipal elections the party placed first in the Danish capital Copenhagen with 24 6 of the votes 22 The party is also active in various Danish trade unions 21 23 Red Green Alliance Enhedslisten De Rod GronneAbbreviationOLeaderCollective leadershipPolitical spokespersonMai VilladsenFounded2 December 1989Merger ofLeft SocialistsCommunist Party of DenmarkSocialist Workers PartyCommunist Workers Party independentsHeadquartersStudiestraede 24 1 1455 Kobenhavn KYouth wingNone cooperating with RGU and SUF Membership 2021 9 398 1 IdeologySocialism 2 3 Eco socialism 4 5 Anti capitalism 6 Euroscepticism 4 7 Political positionLeft wing 8 9 to far left 10 European affiliationMaintenant le PeupleParty of the European LeftEuropean Anti Capitalist LeftEuropean Parliament groupThe Left in the European Parliament GUE NGL 11 Nordic affiliationNordic Green Left AllianceColoursRedFolketing9 179European Parliament1 14Regions 12 12 205Municipalities 13 102 2 432Election symbolWebsiteenhedslisten wbr dkPolitics of DenmarkPolitical partiesElections Contents 1 Political and ideological position 2 Policies 2 1 Social policy 2 2 Economic policy 2 3 Foreign policy 3 History 4 Electoral performance 4 1 Parliament 4 2 Local elections 4 3 European Parliament 5 Membership 6 Elected representatives 6 1 2022 Danish general election 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksPolitical and ideological position EditThe party describes itself as a socialist and democratic grassroots party which claims also to represent green politics peace movement anti discrimination and trade union movement The party s ideological position is set out in a manifesto from 2014 21 It proposes that a socialistic society of the future neither can nor should be described in detail but rather be developed and shaped by the people living in it It describes socialism as an answer to the problems caused by capitalism such as non sufficient democracy crises destruction of nature inequality racism and war 21 Holding anti capitalist 6 and soft Eurosceptic 4 24 25 views about the economic system it says A new and actually democratic system of society requires fundamental changes in the ownership of the means of production such as companies land and natural resources Collective forms of ownership will be dominating We propose that public authorities co workers local communities and other collectives of persons should own and run institutions and companies A democratic economy means a democratic work life as well The work place should be characterized by democracy and the employees must have a constitutional right to decisive influence on the organization of work in the workplace 21 The Red Green Alliance recognizes that methods achieving this may differ depending on the course of class struggle but will eventually require a revolution one that must be supported by a majority of the population manifested through democratic and free elections 21 The party often adopts particular views in relation to the other parties in the Folketing and opt out of many of the settlements reached seen as an expression of class collaboration Until the conditions for the party s long term goal are presented the party will use its seats in parliament to vote for any improvement and against any deterioration of working class people s lives In line with this the party agreed at its national conference in 2010 that if Helle Thorning Schmidt became Prime Minister after the 2011 election the party would vote for a red budget bill that did not contain obvious flaws Policies EditSocial policy Edit The party places great emphasis on the fight against social inequality and poverty and is in favour of strengthening and expanding the welfare state The party believes there is place in society for all forms of diversity including gender sexuality disability and ethnic background 26 It also advocates for a larger public sector among other things to improve quality of life for public sector employees 27 The party believes people should be free to choose when they want to get an education and is opposed to tuition fees which they believe harm opportunities for everyone to acquire an education 28 The party does not see unemployment as being equal to laziness and seeks to abolish the Danish equivalent of workfare 29 Economic policy Edit The party is decisively anti capitalist and has particularly distinguished itself as an opponent of transfer pricing whereby multinational companies minimise the amount they pay in tax by attributing their profits to countries with lower tax rates In response to the Great Recession the Red Green Alliance urged stricter control of loans the introduction of a Tobin tax and the nationalisation of banks and mortgage companies It also believes that the public sector must be expanded the wages of the lowest paid workers should be raised and the insurance based unemployment benefit period should be extended to a minimum of four years At the same time students should be given a greater state education grant 30 At minimum all benefits should be raised to 13 500 kroner per month before taxes 29 Foreign policy Edit The party advocates for foreign policy based on respect for human rights which it believes has not been appropriately prioritised in the past It also proposes greater support for developing countries through a doubling of foreign aid 31 and campaigns for Denmark s withdrawal from NATO In March 2019 the party announced it would no longer campaign for a referendum to leave the EU pointing to Brexit illustrating the need for clarity before withdrawal can be considered 32 The party operates on the fundamental belief that peace is preferable to war and has been opposed from the beginning to Denmark s participation in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan That principle was challenged in 2011 when the party s parliamentary group voted in favour of Danish participation in the UN sanctioned military action in Libya on the basis that it was a humanitarian action 33 However the decision led to significant backlash and the party s support was pulled back after the military intervention began 34 History Edit Election posters including Red Green Alliance at the parliamentary elections in 2007 The party was formed in 1989 as an electoral alliance of three left wing parties Left Socialists VS Communist Party of Denmark DKP and Socialist Workers Party SAP Originally the plan was to unite these parties alongside The Greens De Gronne Common Course and Humanist to form a broad based progressive movement but this did not materialize 35 A fourth party the Communist Workers Party KAP succeeded in joining the alliance in 1991 but its involvement was vetoed a year later by DKP Prior to the 2007 parliamentary election the party enlisted Asmaa Abdol Hamid a Danish Muslim candidate who identified herself as a feminist democrat and socialist 36 She is endorsed by some imams opposed by others including those in Hizb ut Tahrir wears a hijab and will not shake hands with men 37 These facts and some of her statements regarding politics and religion made her the target of some criticism across the political spectrum particularly from the Danish People s Party Some left wing figures cited her candidacy as a reason for withdrawing their support from the party 38 An anti religious network was created within the party with the stated goal of turning the party into a solely atheist party with a materialist Marxist basis 39 During the campaign there was some speculation as to whether her candidacy would attract or repel voters 40 41 The results of the election were 2 2 for the party down from 3 4 in the 2005 parliamentary elections Although not elected Abdol Hamid maintained that she had attracted voters to the party The four seats won by the party went to Frank Aaen Johanne Schmidt Nielsen Line Barfod and Per Clausen In the 2011 parliamentary election the party received 6 7 of the vote and tripled its representation from 4 seats to 12 seats The party contested the 2013 local elections on a platform of improving public transport and making greater public investment 42 As part of the left leaning Red bloc coalition with the Social Democrats the Red Green Alliance accepted the state budget twice and was in opposition twice in the period from 2011 to 2015 But at no point did they report direct opposition to the government In the 2015 general election the party received 7 8 of the vote and increased its representation from 12 seats to 14 seats Electoral performance EditParliament Edit Election Votes Seats Government1990 54 038 1 7 10 0 179 0 Extra parliamentary1994 104 701 3 1 7 6 179 6 Opposition1998 91 933 2 7 8 5 179 1 External support2001 82 685 2 4 7 4 179 1 Opposition2005 114 123 3 4 7 6 179 2 Opposition2007 74 982 2 2 8 4 179 2 Opposition2011 236 860 6 7 6 12 179 8 External support2015 274 463 7 8 4 14 179 2 Opposition2019 244 664 6 9 6 13 179 1 External support2022 181 452 5 1 8 9 179 4 OppositionThe distribution of Red Green Alliance s voters is geographically disparate While in Norrebro and Vesterbro districts of Copenhagen it was the strongest party in the 2015 election scoring 26 5 and 20 8 respectively in Bispebjerg it received 22 placing it only slightly behind the Social Democrats the party is much more weakly positioned in rural parts of Denmark taking only an average of 4 5 of votes in Western Jutland with as little as 3 1 in the Ringkobing district Local elections Edit Municipal electionsYear Seats 1993 6 4 703 New1997 14 4 685 82001 11 4 647 3Municipal reform2005 24 2 522 132009 14 2 468 102013 119 2 444 1052017 102 2 432 172021 114 2 436 12 Regional electionsYear Seats 1993 1 374 New1997 2 374 12001 2 374 0Municipal reform2005 6 205 42009 2 205 42013 15 205 132017 12 205 32021 14 205 2European Parliament Edit Prior to 2016 the Red Green Alliance never directly contested elections to the European Parliament preferring to support the People s Movement against the EU a Eurosceptic party whose MEP sits in the European United Left Nordic Green Left group Some of the party s MPs were considering running an independent list for the 2014 elections 43 but this idea was dismissed by a majority on the party s yearly meeting 44 In a historic decision in the party s yearly meeting in May 2016 a majority decided to directly contest the 2019 European Parliament election 45 Year Group Votes Seats 2019 GUE NGL 151 903 5 5 7 1 14 N AMembership EditYear Membership Change in Percent1992 1 082 1993 999 7 7 1994 1 093 9 4 1995 1 189 8 8 1996 1 282 7 8 1997 1 479 15 4 1998 2 023 36 8 1999 1 968 2 7 2000 1 945 1 1 2001 1 992 2 4 2002 2 366 18 8 2003 2 321 1 9 2004 2 524 8 7 2005 3 739 48 1 2006 4 127 10 4 2007 4 099 0 7 2008 4 330 5 6 2009 4 373 1 0 2010 4 553 4 1 2011 7 714 51 0 2012 9 385 21 7 2013 9 483 1 0 2014 9 023 4 9 2015 9 504 5 3 2016 9 335 1 8 2017 9 015 3 4 2018 8 936 3 4 2019 9 662 8 1 Elected representatives Edit2022 Danish general election Edit Jette Gottlieb Peder Hvelplund Rosa Lund Soren Egge Rasmussen Soren Sondergaard Victoria Velasquez Mai Villadsen Pelle Dragsted Trine MachSee also EditPolitics of Denmark Johanne Schmidt NielsenReferences Edit Hoffmann Hansen Henrik Nilsson Simone Jespersen Johan Storgaard Krasnik Benjamin Fabricius Kitte Schmidt Mara Malene Raun Gosmann Mie Borggreen Winther og Sara Mathilde 3 October 2022 Overblik Partierne i Danmark Kristeligt Dagblad in Danish Retrieved 4 January 2023 Danish elections 2015 a guide to the parties candidates and electoral system the Guardian 16 June 2015 Retrieved 11 July 2022 Political and cultural representations of Muslims Islam in the plural Christopher Flood Leiden Brill 2012 p 43 ISBN 978 90 04 23103 0 OCLC 808367020 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b c d Nordsieck Wolfram 2019 Denmark Parties and Elections in Europe Copenhagen faces backlash over 2 7B green island plan POLITICO 15 December 2022 a b Asa Bengtsson Kasper Hansen olafur TH Haroarson Hanne Marthe Narud Henrik Oscarsson 15 November 2013 The Nordic Voter Myths of Exceptionalism ECPR Press p 204 ISBN 978 1 907301 50 6 Enhedslistens topmedlemmer Hellere EU kritik indefra end EU udmeldelse 11 March 2022 The left wing Red Green Alliance GUE NGL also look like they will make no significant gains in the election despite taking their first ever seat in the European Parliament last week won from the left wing People s Movement Against the EU GUE NGL Europe Elects 1 June 2019 Danish left wing party changes stance on EU membership referendum The Local dk 15 March 2019 Fourth party leader states intentions to become Danish PM The Local dk 16 August 2018 Pernille Skipper lead spokesperson with the left wing Red Green Alliance Enhedslisten party has said she intends to run as a prime ministerial candidate at Denmark s next general election Jensen Teis 24 June 2016 Danish government allied populists call for EU vote PM rejects Reuters Retrieved 5 October 2019 Imagining the Peoples of Europe populist discourses across the political spectrum Edited by Jan Zienkowski and Ruth Breeze p 149 Chapter 6 Chapter author oscar Garcia Agustin Published by John Benjamins Publishing Company in 2019 Retrieved via Google Books March Luke 2008 Contemporary Far Left Parties in Europe PDF Berlin Friedrich Ebert Stiftung p 3 ISBN 978 3 86872 000 6 Edwards Geoffrey Georg Wiessala 2000 The European Union annual review 1998 1999 Wiley Blackwell p 184 ISBN 978 0 631 21598 1 Banks Arthur S Thomas C Muller 1995 Political Handbook of the World 1994 95 CSA Publications p 234 ISBN 978 0 933199 10 1 Government and opposition Volume 34 Weidenfeld and Nicolson 1999 p 73 Enhedslisten GUE NGL AKVA3 Valg til regions rad efter omrade parti og stemmer kandidater kon Statistics Denmark Retrieved 13 June 2010 VALGK3 Valg til kommunale rad efter omrade parti og stemmer kandidater kon Statistics Denmark Retrieved 13 June 2010 Boffey Daniel 3 March 2021 Denmark under pressure to drop plans to work with Israel on vaccines The Guardian Retrieved 3 April 2021 Skydsgaard Nikolaj 20 April 2020 Denmark blocks firms registered in tax havens from state aid Reuters Retrieved 3 April 2021 Denmark passes legislation to strip ISIL fighters of citizenship Al Jazeera 24 October 2019 Retrieved 3 April 2021 Meret Susi Beyer Gregersen Andreas 24 July 2019 Islam as a floating signifier Right wing populism and perceptions of Muslims in Denmark Brookings Institution Retrieved 3 April 2021 Thomassen Lasse 5 June 2015 Is there an Alternative for Denmark openDemocracy Retrieved 3 April 2021 Gemma Loomes 17 June 2013 Party Strategies in Western Europe Party Competition and Electoral Outcomes Routledge pp 201 ISBN 978 1 136 59303 1 Retrieved 31 July 2013 Enhedslistens historie Enhedslisten Retrieved 25 February 2015 a b c d e f Enhedslistens principprogram Enhedslisten Retrieved 25 February 2015 Kommunalvalget Resultater i Kobenhavn kmdvalg dk in Danish Jacobsen Louis 11 November 2019 Fagbevaegelsen skal vaere politisk men ikke partipolitisk Information in Danish The UK and Denmark Growing public euroscepticism EU politik enhedslisten dk in Danish Retrieved 7 March 2015 Plads til alle Enhedslisten Retrieved 25 February 2015 Flere haender mere i lon Enhedslisten Archived from the original on 10 June 2015 Retrieved 25 February 2015 Born og uddannelse Enhedslisten Archived from the original on 10 June 2015 Retrieved 25 February 2015 a b Ulighed og fattigdom Enhedslisten Retrieved 25 February 2015 Velfaerd til alle Archived from the original on 17 July 2010 Retrieved 20 November 2013 Enhedslisten pa Folketingets hjemmeside Hvass Jesper Rytgaard Nikolaj 15 March 2019 Enhedslisten parkerer krav om dansk udmeldelse af EU efter britisk kaos Jyllands Posten in Danish Retrieved 15 March 2019 Enhedslisten stemmer for humanitaer aktion i Libyen Enhedslisten Archived from the original on 10 June 2015 Retrieved 25 February 2015 Oliver Routhe Skov og Turi Kjestine Meyhoff 30 March 2011 Enhedslisten traekker stotten til Libyen krigen Retrieved 25 February 2015 Enhedslistens historie Enhedslisten Retrieved 25 February 2015 Feminist socialist devout Muslim woman who has thrown Denmark into turmoil The Guardian 16 May 2007 Retrieved 20 November 2013 Imamer anbefaler Asmaa Kristeligt Dagblad 1 May 2007 Kaere Asmaa Information 1 September 2007 Religionskrig hos Enhedslisten permanent dead link aalborg dk 20 September 2007 Asmaa kan spraenge Enh s partiliste i Kobenhavn Archived 4 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine Politiken 2 November 2007 Ekspert Asmaa har skraemt marxisterne Archived 3 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine Politiken 1 November 2007 Party profile Enhedslisten 9 November 2013 Retrieved 20 November 2013 Red Green Alliance puts pressure to People s Movement Against the EU Ekstra Bladet in Danish 27 March 2013 Retrieved 21 May 2016 Red Green Alliance scraps EU election run Berlingske in Danish 27 April 2013 Retrieved 21 May 2016 Red Green Alliance will run independently in the next European Parliament election in Danish Danmarks Radio 15 May 2016 Retrieved 21 May 2016 External links Edit in Danish Official website in English Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Red Green Alliance Denmark amp oldid 1131402432, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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