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This is a list of the results in the 2022 Danish general election in Denmark. The results are as found on the official website dedicated to the results made by Statistics Denmark . [ 1 ]
Frederiksen, the leader of the Social Democrats, became Prime Minister of Denmark. [12] On 2 July 2022 Sofie Carsten Nielsen, leader of the Social Liberals, one of supporting parties of the government, encouraged Frederiksen to set an election date before 4 October after the report of the Mink Commission was published, criticising the ...
15 May – Denmark wins a bronze medal at the 2022 Thomas & Uber Cup. 3 July – Viktor Axelsen wins the 2023 Malaysia Open. 28 August – Viktor Axelsen wins a gold medal in men's single at the 2022 BWF World Championships. 18–23 October 2022 Denmark Open takes place in Odense. 30 October – Viktor Axelsen wins gold in Men's Single at the ...
Elections to local councils (municipal or regional) and to the European Parliament are held on fixed dates. Elections use the party-list proportional representation system. All Danish citizens, living in the Kingdom of Denmark and at least 18 years of age, are eligible to vote in parliamentary elections and long-time residents may vote in local ...
Wisconsin new maps rare occasion where parties agreed, sort of A week ago, Republican lawmakers saw the writing on the wall and, for only the second time since the 1960s , “agreed” with a ...
This national electoral calendar for 2022 lists the national/federal elections held in 2022 in all sovereign states and their dependent territories. By-elections are excluded, though national referendums are included.
A new map enacted before the 2022 elections was just as tilted, if not a little more so. Republicans ended up winning 64 Assembly seats. Then the spring 2023 election produced a 4-3 liberal ...
General elections are scheduled to be held in Denmark no later than 31 October 2026, according to § 32 in the constitution, which defines an election cycle as four years. All 179 seats in the Folketing will be up for election, 175 in Denmark proper, two in Greenland and two in the Faroe Islands (the two other territories of the Danish Realm). [2]