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Danish government party wants country to have more children

Lars Løkke Rasmussen, the leader of coalition government party the Moderates, says he wants more people in Denmark to have children.

Danish government party wants country to have more children
Lars Løkke Rasmussen and Monika Rubin at the Moderate party's summer conference. Photo: Claus Fisker/Ritzau Scanpix

Rasmussen, who is also foreign minister, made the comments in an interview with newspaper Politiken as Denmark’s new political season begins.

While most Danish politicians spend July on holiday, they return in August with each party having a summer conference or sommergruppemøde at which it presents its priorities and agenda for the rest of the year.

Low fertility rates in Denmark should be high on the country’s political agenda, Rasmussen told Politiken.

“It’s not just a Danish phenomenon because it’s a characteristic of most civilised societies, certainly in Europe. I’ve seen British newspapers this summer describe it as a crisis greater than epidemics, Ukraine and immigration,” he said.

The Moderate leader said he wants to make it government policy to push Denmark’s fertility rate from the current 1.5 to 2.1, which is statistically considered the level needed to maintain a society.

Asked what measures could be taken, he praised suggestions made by other commentators that the pensions system could be used to help first-time home buyers and that new parents could be given a cash bonus of up to 20,000 kroner.

But a “combination of many things” would be needed to have a large enough effect, he said, adding that he sought a “framework” through which the government and parliament can discuss and begin to address the issue.

READ ALSO: Copenhagen partially spares city’s forest kindergartens from closure

The Moderate Party’s political spokesperson Monika Rubin meanwhile told DR radio on Tuesday that changes could be made to labour rules to benefit families.

“We should look at whether we can make a more flexible labour market for families with small children. It’s tough to have small children,” she said.

“They get sick more often than bigger children and need their parents in a different way,” she said.

The suggestion has already faced pushback from other parties.

In a post on social media X (Twitter), the Liberal Alliance tax spokesperson Steffen Frølund said it is “not up to politicians to get involved in people’s working hours, whether by scrapping public holidays, ordering them to the production line or demanding shorter days for parents”.

Frølund’s comment appears to reference the government’s decision to repeal the Great Prayer Day public holiday in 2023 and Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen’s past comments on the necessity of working in tough jobs.

“All those things are between the employer and employee,” Frølund said.

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POLITICS

Copenhagen lord mayor post gets sole Social Democratic candidate

Ex-minister Pernille Rosenkrantz-Theil will be only Social Democrat to for the position of Lord Mayor of Copenhagen at next year's local elections in Denmark, after the previous mayor quit the job to take over Rosenkrantz-Theil's own role in the government.

Copenhagen lord mayor post gets sole Social Democratic candidate

Rosenkrantz-Theil’s sole candidacy to become mayor in Copenhagen was confirmed by the Social Democrats after the deadline for application passed on Wednesday.

That makes the former minister a near-certainty to be officially announced as the candidate on Wednesday following a party meeting in Copenhagen, newswire Ritzau writes.

Interim mayor Lars Weiss has said he will continue in the post until the local elections but will not run in them, according to media reports.

Copenhagen’s previous mayor, Sophie Hæstorp Andersen was last month appointed as the new Minister of Social Affairs and Housing, a position she took over from  Rosenkrantz-Theil.

After some observers have criticised the move, Rosenkrantz-Theil said there was no guarantee she would be chosen by the Social Democrats as their lead candidate for Lord Mayor in the forthcoming local elections, which will take place across the country in November 2025.

The Social Democrats suffered significant losses under Hæstorp Andersen in the 2021 local elections, but she was still able to secure the mayoral position.

READ ALSO: Copenhagen gets interim mayor following government reshuffle

The former mayor suffered a damaging a political defeat when the Social Democrats were unusually left out of the 2023 annual budget after the left-wing party Red Green Alliance made a deal with the conservative parties.

The Red Green Alliance became the largest party in the Copenhagen city government in the 2021 election. Rosenkrantz-Theil, who was once a member of that party before switching to the Social Democrats, is seen as a strong candidate for the 2025 election.

During the recent government reshuffle, Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen acknowledged the challenges faced by the Social Democrats in urban areas.

“There is no doubt that the Social Democrats are challenged in the cities. We have many mayoral posts. We will do everything we can to keep them after the next municipal elections,” she said.

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