From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Liberal Alliance (Denmark)
| Field | Value | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| name | Liberal Alliance | ||||
| logo | Logo of the Liberal Alliance (Denmark).svgclass=skin-invert | ||||
| logo_size | 260px | ||||
| colorcode | |||||
| abbreviation | LA | ||||
| I | |||||
| leader | Alex Vanopslagh | ||||
| founder | Naser Khader (NA), | ||||
| Anders Samuelsen (LA) | |||||
| foundation | {{ublist | ||||
| {{start date | 2007 | 5 | 7 | df | y}} |
| {{start date | 2008 | 8 | 27 | df | y}} |
| headquarters | Nybrogade 10 3.sal DK-1203 København K | ||||
| youth_wing | Liberal Alliance Youth | ||||
| ideology | Classical liberalism | ||||
| Right-libertarianism | |||||
| membership_year | 2021 | ||||
| position | Centre-right to right-wing | ||||
| europarl | European People's Party Group | ||||
| affiliation1_title | Nordic affiliation | ||||
| affiliation1 | Centre Group | ||||
| affiliation2_title | Council of Europe affiliation | ||||
| affiliation2 | ALDE-PACE | ||||
| colours | {{ublist | ||||
| }} Plum{{efn | name | newalliance}} | |||
| split | Social Liberal Party | ||||
| Conservative People's Party | |||||
| <!-- Values obtained from Wikidata; to edit, see https://www.wikidata.org/ --> | seats1_title | Folketing | |||
| seats1 | |||||
| seats2_title | European Parliament | ||||
| seats2 | |||||
| seats3_title | Regions | ||||
| seats3 | |||||
| seats4_title | Municipalities | ||||
| seats4 | |||||
| symbol | [[File:LA cirkel blaa pa hvid.svg | 50px]] | |||
| [[File:Liberal Alliance Logo.png | 50px]] | ||||
| website | |||||
| country | Denmark |
I Anders Samuelsen (LA) | | Right-libertarianism | Navy blue (official) | Turquoise (customary) | Plum Conservative People's Party
The Liberal Alliance (LA; ) is a classical liberal and right-libertarian political party in Denmark. The party is a component of the centre-right bloc in Danish politics. The party's platform is based upon economic liberalism, promotion of tax cuts, reduction of welfare programmes, socially libertarian policies, and a pragmatic, but oppositional stance towards European integration.
From November 2016 to June 2019, the Liberal Alliance (I) was part of the Lars Løkke Rasmussen III Cabinet a three-party coalition government, alongside Liberal Party () and the Conservative People's Party (). At the 2022 Danish general election, the party won 14 seats. It has 15 seats after Pernille Vermund chose to join the party.
History
New Alliance (2007–2009)
The party was founded as the New Alliance ()da on 7 May 2007 by MP Naser Khader and MEP Anders Samuelsen from the Social Liberal Party and Gitte Seeberg, a Conservative People's Party MEP. The party supported the government of the Venstre and Conservative People's Party also endorsed by the Danish People's Party. To comply with Danish election law and to be able to stand for elections the New Alliance had to gather 19,185 signatures of supporters on special forms, the number being equivalent to one parliamentary seat in the Folketing. Each completed form had to be certified with the civil registry offices of municipalities before being collectively handed in to the Ministry of the Interior. While the New Alliance did not take any stand on this offer, the minor party Centre Democrats offered to let the New Alliance put forward candidates on their lists in the event of an election being called before the New Alliance had finished its nomination process.
On one occasion on 12 May 2007 in Horsens, the three leading figures of the party managed to collect over 2,000 signatures in one day. On 21 May, the party reported they were half-way, having gathered in 10,000 signatures with the requirement being 19,185 (1/175 of the votes cast at the latest general election). The party completed its nomination process on 29 June by being accepted on the Ministry of the Interior's list of parties eligible stand for election to the Folketing after handing in the 21,516 required signatures and was given the party letter Y. Immediately after its creation, the New Alliance had a surge of members. Just one day after the announcement of the party, more than 12,000 had registered on the party website. Three days later, 16,000 had registered and 8,000 of these had paid the membership fee.
On 30 August 2007, the party publicly launched a policy programme. Some of the points in this programme included longer mandatory school attendance, with free food and homework aid; a European Marshall Plan to the Middle East; increasing foreign aid to 1% of GDP; increased focus on prevention in public health, with lower prices on healthy foods; and an exhaustive reform related to immigration and asylum politics. In the 2007 general election held on 13 November 2007, the party won 2.8% of the vote, winning 5 of 179 seats in the Danish Parliament.
Rebranding and Samuelsen leadership (2008–2019)
On 29 January 2008, founding member Gitte Seeberg left the party in protest against the party's status as a right-wing party which conflicted with her own desire to form a centrist party with the goal of mitigating the influence of the Danish People's Party. On 5 February 2008, Malou Aamund, another of the party's members of parliament, left the party and joined the governing party Venstre. On 24 June 2008, Jørgen Poulsen was excluded from the Liberal Alliance's parliamentary group, although not from the party itself. Under the new leadership of Anders Samuelsen, the party position moved towards the right, espousing economic liberalism and right-libertarian policies, with the party changing its name to the Liberal Alliance on 27 August 2008.
On 1 September 2008, the party regained a third mandate in the parliament as Gitte Seeberg was appointed secretary general of the Danish branch of the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF). Her mandate was given to former deputy mayor of Slagelse, Villum Christensen. On 5 January 2009, founding member and party leader Naser Khader left the party, citing that he did not believe in it any longer. At the time, Anders Samuelsen was scheduled to take over leadership of the party later that month. That same day, Villum Christensen expressed doubt on his future in the party. After Khader's exit a 2009 documentary titled Dagbog fra midten (Diary from the Centre) documenting the party's founding and eventual collapse was released with scenes detailing internal disagreements between the party's lead members. Khader eventually joined the Conservatives who he represented as an MP from 2009–2011 and 2015–2021 where he after a period as an independent left politics for good in 2022.
In the 2009 European Parliament election, the party won 0.6% of the vote, leaving the party without representation in the European parliament. In the 2011 general election held on 15 September 2011, the party won 5.0% of the vote and 9 seats. When Malou Aamund resigned from the Folketing in June 2011, she was replaced by Professor Niels Høiby, who took his seat with the Liberal Alliance, taking their contingent in four. In the 2014 European Parliament election, the Liberal Alliance received 2.9% of the vote, again failing to return any MEPs.
In the 2015 general election held on 18 June 2015, the party won 7.5% of the vote and 13 seats in the Folketing. In its most successful constituency, Gentofte Municipality, a well-off suburb of Copenhagen, it even scored 17.5% while on Bornholm its share of votes was only 4%. Initially, the party did not participate in Lars Løkke Rasmussen's Venstre minority cabinet, but it did lent its parliamentary support to the government.
Participation in third Løkke government
In late November 2016, it joined a three-party centre-right coalition government alongside Venstre and the Conservative People's Party in Løkke Rasmussen's third government. Party leader Anders Samuelsen was appointed Minister of Foreign Affairs while Simon Emil Ammitzbøll-Bille took the post of Minister of the Economy and Interior. Additional cabinet members of Liberal Alliance were Merete Riisager (Minister of Education), Mette Bock (Minister of Culture), Ole Birk Olesen (Minister of Transport) and Thyra Frank (Minister for Elder Affairs).
At the 2019 general election held on 5 June 2019, the party won 2.3% of the vote, losing 9 of its 13 seats in the Folketing. At the same time, party leader Anders Samuelsen failed to get reelected, leading him to resign the following day.
Vanopslagh leadership (2019–present)
On 9 June 2019, Alex Vanopslagh became the new leader of the Liberal Alliance with MP Simon Emil Ammitzbøll-Bille leaving the LA on 23 October attributing political disagreements as the reason. At the 2021 local elections, LA achieved its first ever mayor with LA candidate Emil Blücher becoming mayor in Solrød Municipality. During the election campaign to the 2022 general election, the party ran on a campaign called Du kan godt roughly translating to 'You can' or 'Yes, you can'. Furthermore, Vanopslagh managed to acquire a large following on the social media platform TikTok especially engaging younger voters. At that election, the party received its best ever result receiving 7.9% equal to 14 seats making it the joint fifth-largest party in the Folketing alongside the Denmark Democrats. Following the formation of the SVM government, the LA is currently in opposition. On 17 January 2024, Pernille Vermund, the former leader of New Right, announced that she had joined the party.
In the 2025 Danish local elections, the party enjoyed its best result ever in a local election, gaining a second mayoral title, and increasing its amount of councillors by over 13 times.
Ideology and platform
Located on the centre-right to right-wing of the political spectrum, the Liberal Alliance has been described in ideology as liberal, classical liberal, libertarian, and right-wing libertarian.
The original New Alliance considered itself a centrist party, "taking the best values of social liberalism and social conservatism". By using these two terms, the New Alliance positioned itself equidistant between the former parties of its founding members. Social liberalism is the official ideology of the Danish Social Liberal Party whereas social conservatism is a term sometimes invoked by members of the Conservative People's Party who stress the support of the welfare society such as Liberal Alliance co-founder Gitte Seeberg. In the earliest days of the party's existence, the party was accused of populism or personalism, still lacking stances on many topics and based on the popularity of Naser Khader. After Gitte Seeberg left the party, the "social conservatism" part was dropped and the party name was changed to the Liberal Alliance. However, there were still considerable ideological differences among the two remaining founders and it was not until Naser Khader was replaced by Anders Samuelsen that the party took on a more classical liberal identity. The party has proposed extensive economic liberal reforms, including a tax reform replacing progressive income tax with a flat-rate income tax of 40%, halving rates of corporation tax, instigating user charges for public healthcare, abolishing early retirement schemes and reassessing everyone receiving disability benefits.
In 2011, the party opposed the government's entry of Denmark into the Euro Plus Pact and continues to maintain a staunch opposition to Denmark entering the eurozone. On the matter of European Union membership, the party supports a smaller European Union based primarily on “free trade, liberty and peace” and in 2022 called for a "slimmed down” EU, giving more power back to the smaller communities. The Liberal Alliance is famously the party in Denmark that pushes for nuclear power the hardest. In 2009, the party voted against subsidies for environmentalist renovations without significant tax cuts. Besides that, the Liberal Alliance prides itself in having one of the most ambitious environmental policy programs of any party. They are against what they call “climate-nationalism”, and argue that Denmark should be a forerunner and create the solutions which will be used in the rest of the world too. In 2011, the Red–Green Alliance and the Liberal Alliance were the only parties whose MPs supported equalising MPs' age of retirement with the rest of the country.
The Liberal Alliance has supported the rights of same-sex couples to marry and adopt, helping to pass both into law. The party opposed the reintroduction of border controls in 2011 and supported the dismantling of them later in that year. It supports ending the ban on foreigners owning holiday homes in Denmark. On 30 August 2011, with 5.0% voter support, Simon Emil Ammitzbøll-Bille told on air to Danish Radio that a vote for the Liberal Alliance is a vote for free hashish. Voter support increased to 7.5% following the statement. In parliament, the party supported the reduction of vehicle registration fees.
After 2019, some members of Liberal Alliance, particularly Henrik Dahl, have become vocally critical of what it deems as "woke ideology" in universities and public education. The party is opposed to gender-change surgery for minors. Some members are also critical of involving gender politics in educational areas.
Organisation
Former logos
Liberal Alliance Logo 01.svg|2011–2016 Liberal Alliance Logo.svg|2016–2019
Leaders
The party has had the following leaders since its foundation:
Funding
The party received donations from the investment bank Saxo Bank (500,000 Danish kroner) and the businessman Lars Kolind (100,000 kroner). As of 22 May 2007, the party had seven paid employees and a number of volunteers. The party announced it would not hire additional employees until it had more funds.
Liberal Alliance Youth
Main article: Liberal Alliance Youth
On 23 February 2008, a youth wing to the party was formed by 21 people under the name of Young Alliance (). When the party changed its name to the Liberal Alliance, the youth branch followed suit changing its name to the Liberal Alliance Youth (Liberal Alliances Ungdom) whose current chairman is Tobias Jæger Pagh.
European parliament affiliation
At its formation, two MEPs joined the party. With the defection of MEPs Gitte Seeberg and Anders Samuelsen, the Conservatives and the Danish Social Liberal Party were effectively left without representation in the European Parliament. The two MEPs did stay in their parliamentary groups (EPP-ED and ALDE, respectively). Both resigned from the European Parliament after being elected to the Danish Parliament in November 2007. The Liberal Alliance announced that it would join the ALDE group after future European Parliament elections. However, the party failed to achieve representation in the European Parliament in both the 2009, 2014 and 2019 European Parliament elections. At the 2024 elections, Henrik Dahl, national MP for the party since 2015, was elected to the European Parliament. Before the election, the party had announced that rather than seeking to join the liberal Renew Europe group (previously ALDE), they would apply to join the conservative EPP group.-
Election results
Parliament
| Election | Votes | % | Seats | +/- | Government | 2007 | 2011 | 2015 | 2019 | 2022 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 97,295 | 2.8 (#7) | 5 | ||||||||
| 176,585 | 5.0 (#7) | 4 | ||||||||
| 265,129 | 7.5 (#5) | 4 | (2015–2016) | |||||||
| (2016–2019) | ||||||||||
| 82,228 | 2.3 (#10) | 9 | ||||||||
| 278,656 | 7.9 (#6) | 10 |
Local elections
;Regional elections
;Mayors
|}
European Parliament
| Year | List leader | Votes | % | Seats | +/– | EP Group | 2009 | 2014 | 2019 | 2024 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Benjamin Dickow | 13,796 | 0.59 (#9) | New | – | ||||||
| Christina Egelund | 65,480 | 2.88 (#8) | 0 | |||||||
| Mette Bock | 60,693 | 2.20 (#10) | 0 | |||||||
| Henrik Dahl | 170,199 | 6.95 (#8) | 1 | EPP |
Party Congresses
-
- landsmøde 2024 13. april
Notes
References
References
- "EPP Group welcomes new members".
- "AKVA3: Valg til regions råd efter område, parti og stemmer/kandidater/køn". Statistics Denmark.
- "LA-byrødder er mere end 13-doblet efter kommunalvalg". Nordjyske.
- Nina Liljeqvist, Kristian Voss. (30 May 2014). "Finland and Denmark: Unprecedented win for the far-right in Denmark, while Finland rewards established parties from the centre". CISE.
- Foundation Schuman. (2012). "Schuman Report on Europe: State of the Union 2012". Springer Science & Business Media.
- (2016). "Routledge Handbook of European Elections". Routledge.
- (2007-08-05). "New Alliance could crack government". [[The Copenhagen Post]].
- (2007-05-11). "CD tilbyder at hjælpe Ny Alliance med underskrifter". [[Danmarks Radio]].
- (2007-05-12). "Ny Alliance samlede 2.000 underskrifter". [[Danmarks Radio]].
- Gottlieb, Mikkel. (2007-05-21). "Ny Alliance halvvejs i mål". [[Berlingske Tidende]].
- [http://www.bt.dk/article/20070629/PCPOLITIK/706290341/1828 Ny Alliance godkendt og vælger liste Y] {{Webarchive. link. (27. September 2007 ''[[B.T. (tabloid)). B.T.]]'', den 29. juni 2007.
- (2007-06-21). "Ny Alliance godkendt og vælger bogstav Y". [[B.T. (tabloid).
- Wind-Friis, Lea. (2007-05-10). "Medlemmer gider godt betale til Ny Alliance". [[Politiken]].
- (2007-08-30). "Ekspert: Khader var overbevisende". [[TV2 (Denmark).
- (2007-08-30). "Det støtter Ny Alliance". [[TV2 (Denmark).
- (2008-01-29). "Gitte Seeberg forlader Ny Alliance". [[Politiken]].
- (2008-02-05). "Malou Aamund forlader Ny Alliance". [[Politiken]].
- (2008-06-24). "NA smider Jørgen Poulsen ud af gruppen". [[Politiken]].
- (2008-08-28). "Nu dropper Ny Alliance også navnet". [[Politiken]].
- (2008-07-08). "Seeberg giver Ny Alliance et mandat tilbage". [[B.T. (tabloid).
- (5 January 2009). "Khader forlader Liberal Alliance – TV 2". nyhederne.tv2.dk.
- (5 January 2009). "Villum C. åbner døren for LA-exit – TV 2". nyhederne.tv2.dk.
- (February 7, 2009). "Kongens fald 'Dagbog fra midten' er tåkrummende underholdning".
- "Foromtale på DR's hjemmeside".
- Villesen, Kristian. (7 May 2021). "Ny Alliance bidrog til kulturhistorien". [[Dagbladet Information]].
- "Naser Khader".
- "Resultater – Hele landet – Europa-Parlamentsvalg søndag 25. maj 2014 – Danmarks Statistik". dst.dk.
- (28 November 2016). "Here is Denmark's new coalition government". The Local.
- "KMDValg".
- "Se valgte politikere til Folketinget og deres personlige stemmer {{!}} DR".
- Arp, Andreas. (6 June 2019). "Anders Samuelsen trækker sig efter katastrofevalg". [[Altinget.dk]].
- Ingvorsen, Emil Søndergård. (9 June 2019). "Alex Vanopslagh bliver Liberal Alliances nye politiske leder". DR.
- (2019-10-23). "Simon Emil Ammitzbøll-Bille forlader Liberal Alliance".
- Seligmann, Laura Nørkjær. (2021-11-22). "Efter dramatisk valg: Liberal Alliance får første borgmester".
- (2021-11-22). "Nyt borgmester-kup: Liberal Alliance får første borgmesterpost".
- ""Du kan godt": LA's modsvar til offerfortællingen flytter stemmer".
- "Liberal Alliances kække »Du kan godt«-kampagne sparker nedad på borgere, der ikke bare kan".
- (2022-10-14). "Alex Vanopslagh kaldes 'daddy' på Tiktok og tiltrækker unge vælgere - TV 2".
- Transbøl, Jonathan. (2022-10-31). "Alex Vanopslagh får uvurderlig opmærksomhed for sin TikTok-succes af de etablerede medier".
- (June 2024). "Alex Vanopslagh afslører sin TikTok-hemmelighed".
- "Vanopslagh er kongen af TikTok: - Jeg er 90 procent politiker og 10 procent influencer".
- (3 November 2022). "En dansktopsanger, en juralektor og en student: Her er Liberal Alliances nye folketingsmedlemmer". [[Politiken]].
- (2024-01-17). "Pernille Vermund bliver medlem af Liberal Alliance - TV 2".
- (2019). "Denmark – Culture Smart!: The Essential Guide to Customs & Culture". Kuperard.
- Michael Booth. (2014). "The Almost Nearly Perfect People: Behind the Myth of the Scandinavian Utopia". Random House.
- (2013). "The Nordic Voter: Myths of Exceptionalism". ECPR Press.
- Wayne C. Thompson. (2013). "Nordic, Central, and Southeastern Europe 2013". Rowman & Littlefield.
- Hans Slomp. (2011). "Europe, a Political Profile: An American Companion to European Politics". ABC-CLIO.
- Bale, Tim. (2021). "Riding the populist wave: Europe's mainstream right in crisis". Cambridge University Press.
- (2016). "Historical Dictionary of Denmark (3rd ed.)". Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
- (2019). "Party System Change, the European Crisis and the State of Democracy". Taylor & Francis.
- (2014). "The National Origins of Policy Ideas: Knowledge Regimes in the United States, France, Germany, and Denmark". Princeton University Press.
- (2019-11-07). "Here is Denmark's latest right-wing political party".
- Jacobsen, Henriette. (2015-06-27). "Liberals form small, minority government in Denmark".
- (2012). "Morality Politics in Western Europe: Parties, Agendas and Policy Choices". Palgrave Macmillan.
- Risager, Bjarke Skærlund. (2022-12-04). "Territorial stigmatization and housing commodification under racial neoliberalism: The case of Denmark's 'ghettos'". Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space.
- Worm, Nikolaj. (2007-05-07). "Ny Alliance drager på landsturné". [[Jyllands-Posten]].
- (2007-05-09). "Økonom: Populistisk skatteforslag fra Ny Alliance". Fyens Stiftstidende.
- [http://cphpost.dk/news/against-the-grain.1118.html "Against the grain"], ''The Copenhagen Post'', March 25, 2012
- "EU policy- A leaner EU".
- (24 March 2011). "Political majority agree to euro pact". [[The Copenhagen Post]].
- (29 April 2011). "Fukushima spurs nuclear opposition". [[The Copenhagen Post]].
- (17 March 2010). "Liberal Alliance blocks 'green' renovation package". [[The Copenhagen Post]].
- "Klima".
- (11 May 2011). "MPs do about face on luxury pension plan". [[The Copenhagen Post]].
- (9 March 2010). "Church minister to consider gay partnerships". [[The Copenhagen Post]].
- (4 July 2011). "Border controls pass, despite objections". [[The Copenhagen Post]].
- (1 August 2011). "Poll results: do away with summerhouse 'double standard'". [[The Copenhagen Post]].
- "Liberal Alliance: Ja til fri hash".
- "Registreringsafgiften på biler sænkes igen i finansloven".
- "Wokeness æder sig ind i det politiske liv - Liberal Alliance".
- "Liberal politiker langer ud efter drag-underholdning til børn: Man prøver at snige en eller anden kønspolitisk dagsorden ind i alle ting".
- (5 January 2009). "Naser Khader forlader Liberal Alliance". Ekstra Bladet.
- (6 June 2019). "Samuelsen trækker sig". Ekstra Bladet.
- (9 June 2019). "Nyudnævnt LA-leder: Nu starter vi et nyt kapitel". Berlingske.
- Mortensen, Hanne Gaard. (2007-05-22). "Ny Alliance i ansættelsesstop". dk-arbejdsmarked.dk.
- (2008-02-23). "21 unge stifter Ung Alliance". [[Politiken]].
- "Forretningsudvalget".
- Lund, Kenneth. (2007-05-07). "Ny Alliance udraderer R og K i EU-parlamentet". [[Politiken]].
- Ungdom, Ezekiel Rohde medlem af Forretningsudvalget, Liberal Alliances. (2024-05-21). "Ledende medlem af LA Ungdom langer ud efter Alex Vanopslagh: Han har glemt, hvem Liberal Alliance er".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Liberal Alliance (Denmark) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report