1988 Danish general election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Hugo999 (talk | contribs) at 03:39, 21 October 2019 (removed Category:1988 in Denmark; added Category:1988 elections in Denmark using HotCat). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

1988 Danish general election
Danish Realm
← 1987 10 May 1988 1990 →

All 179 seats in the Folketing
Turnout85.3%
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Social Democrats Svend Auken 29.8% 55 +1
Conservatives Poul Schlüter 19.3% 35 −3
SF Gert Petersen 13.0% 24 −3
Venstre Uffe Ellemann-Jensen 11.8% 22 +3
Progress Pia Kjærsgaard 9.0% 16 +7
Social Liberals Niels Helveg Petersen 5.6% 10 −1
Centre Democrats Erhard Jakobsen 4.7% 9 0
scope="row" style="border-left: 4px solid Template:Christian Democrats (Denmark)/meta/color;" | KrF Flemming Kofod-Svendsen 2.0% 4 0
Elected in the Faroe Islands
People's Jógvan Sundstein 24.7% 1 0
Union Pauli Ellefsen 24.4% 1 +1
Elected in Greenland
Siumut Jonathan Motzfeldt 40.1% 1 0
Atassut Otto Steenholdt 38.7% 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Prime Minister before Prime Minister-elect
Poul Schlüter
Conservatives
Poul Schlüter
Conservatives

General elections were held in Denmark on 10 May 1988,[1] just seven months after the last elections. Prime Minister Poul Schlüter chose to call for an election after the Conservative People's Party-led government fell short of a majority in a foreign policy issue after they failed to come to an agreement with the Social Democrats. In a parliamentary debate, Prime Minister Poul Schlüter accused Svend Auken (the leader of the Social Democrats) of breaking a political deal between the two of them whilst Auken accused Schlüter of lying to the public.

However, the election did not change the balance of power in the Folketing. Common Course failed to cross the 2% percent threshold and lost their four seats. The Centre Democrats and the Christian People's Party left the government (although they continued to support it) and were replaced by the Danish Social Liberal Party. The reason for doing this was that it gave Schlüter a majority in foreign policy issues which had caused this election. Nonetheless, the Centre Democrats and the Christian People's Party continued to support the government.

Voter turnout was 85.7% in Denmark proper, 70.3% in the Faroe Islands and 57.9% in Greenland.[2]

Results

Denmark
Party Votes % Seats +/–
Social Democratic Party 992,682 29.8 55 +1
Conservative People's Party 642,048 19.3 35 –3
Socialist People's Party 433,261 13.0 24 –3
Venstre 394,190 11.8 22 +3
Progress Party 298,132 9.0 16 +7
Danish Social Liberal Party 185,707 5.6 10 –1
Centre Democrats 155,464 4.7 9 0
Christian People's Party 68,047 2.0 4 0
Common Course 63,263 1.9 0 –4
De Grønne 44,960 1.4 0 0
Communist Party of Denmark 27,439 0.8 0 0
Left Socialists 20,303 0.6 0 0
Independents 3,633 0.1 0 0
Invalid/blank votes 23,522
Total 3,352,651 100 175 0
Faroe Islands
People's Party 5,655 24.7 1 0
Union Party 5,597 24.4 1 +1
Social Democratic Party 4,861 21.2 0 –1
Republican Party 4,690 20.5 0 0
Self-Government Party 897 3.9 0 0
Christian People's Party 891 3.9 0 0
Progress Party 321 1.4 0 0
Invalid/blank votes 100
Total 23,012 100 2 0
Greenland
Siumut 8,415 40.1 1 0
Atassut 8,135 38.7 1 0
Inuit Ataqatigiit 3,628 17.3 0 0
Polar Party 821 3.9 0 0
Invalid/blank votes 1,169
Total 22,168 100 2 0
Source: Nohlen & Stöver
Popular vote
A
29.82%
C
19.29%
F
13.01%
V
11.84%
Z
8.96%
B
5.58%
D
4.67%
Q
2.04%
P
1.90%
G
1.35%
K
0.82%
Y
0.61%
Others
0.11%

References

  1. ^ Dieter Nohlen & Philip Stöver (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p. 525 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
  2. ^ Nohlen & Stöver, p547

Further reading

  • Jespersen, Mary P. S. "A Danish Defence Dilemma: The Election of May 1988," West European Politics (1989) 12#1 pp. 189–195.