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Danish parliamentary election, 2001

The Danish Parliamentary Election of 2001 held on November 20, 2001 saw a dramatic change in the political composition of the Danish parliament or Folketing. For the first time since the 1920s the Social Democrats did not win the most seats. Anders Fogh Rasmussen of the centre-right Liberal (Venstre) party became Prime Minister in coalition with the Conservative People's Party, and reliant on the vote of other right wing parties such as the Danish People's Party, which polled better than ever before.

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Party Leader Total votes Percentage of ballots cast Seats won Gain/Loss
Liberal (Venstre) (V)Anders Fogh Rasmussen1,077,85831.256+14
Social Democrats (A)Poul Nyrup Rasmussen1,003,02329.152-11
Danish People's Party (O)Pia Kjaersgaard413,9871222+9
Conservative People's Party (C)Bendt Bendtsen312,7709.116-
Socialist People's Party (F)Holger K. Nielsen219,8426.412-1
Social Liberal Party (B)Marianne Jelved179,0235.29+2
Red-Green Unity List (Ø)none82,6852.44-1
Christian People's Party (Q)Jann Sjursen78,7932.34-
Centrist Democrats (D)Mimi Jakobsen61,0311.80-8
Progress Party (Z)19,3400.60-4
Other Parties inapplicable1,01600-
Elligible Voters3 998 957
Votes Cast3 484 957
Voter turnout87.1%
SourceFolketinget.dk

68 of the 179 members in the parliament decided by the 2001 vote are women. That's about 38% of the sitting members.

See also





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