Venstre (Denmark)

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Venstre[b] (V; Danish: [ˈvenstʁɐ], lit.'Left'), full name Venstre, Danmarks Liberale Parti (English: Left, Denmark's Liberal Party), is a conservative-liberal,[2][3][4] agrarian[10] political party in Denmark. Founded as part of a peasants' movement against the landed aristocracy, today it espouses an economically liberal, pro-free-market ideology.[11]

Venstre, Denmark's Liberal Party
Venstre, Danmarks Liberale Parti
AbbreviationV
LeaderTroels Lund Poulsen
Deputy LeaderStephanie Lose [dk]
Founded1870 (original form)
1910 (current form)
HeadquartersSøllerødvej 30,
2840 Holte
Youth wingVenstres Ungdom
Student wingLiberal Students of Denmark
Membership (2021)Decrease 28,007[1][needs update]
Ideology
Political positionCentre-right[7]
European affiliationAlliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe
International affiliationLiberal International
European Parliament groupRenew Europe
Nordic affiliationCentre Group
Colours  Navy blue
SloganFrihed og fællesskab ("Freedom and Community")
Folketing
23 / 179[a]
European Parliament
3 / 14
Regions[8]
54 / 205
Municipalities[9]
605 / 2,436
Mayors
34 / 98
Election symbol
V
Party flag
Flag of the Venstre, Denmark's Liberal Party
Website
www.venstre.dk

Venstre is the major party of the centre-right in Denmark, and the second-largest party in the country. The party has produced many Prime Ministers. In the 2022 general elections, Venstre received 13.3% of the vote and 23 out of 179 seats. Following the resignation of Jakob Ellemann-Jensen, the party is led by Troels Lund Poulsen who serves as the country's Deputy Prime Minister.[12] Since December 2022, the party has been a junior partner in the second Frederiksen government.

The party is a member of Liberal International and the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE) and has four MEPs in the European Parliament.[13]

History

Venstre 1945 election material ("Venstre has been dealt a good hand").

1870–1910

Venstre was founded in 1870 under the name Det Forenede Venstre ("The United Left"). Originally, the party consisted of multiple conflicting groups, all united under the classical liberal (then the standard left-wing) ideology, the safeguarding of farmers' interests and opposition to the then right-wing classical conservative party Højre (literally "Right"). After the party in 1872 gained an absolute majority in the Folketing, it became the leading voice in the battle for parliamentarism, whereafter the party in 1895 split in two, Venstrereformpartiet ("Venstre Reform Party") and Det Moderate Venstre ("The Moderate Left"). In 1905, social liberal factions split from the party and formed Radikale Venstre (also known as the Danish Social Liberal Party), and in 1910 Venstrereformpartiet and Det Moderate Venstre reunited again under the name Venstre.[14]

1910–2009

With the decreasing numbers of farms and the growing urbanisation, membership and voter support dropped in the 1950s. During the 1960s the party gradually evolved from being a traditional farmers' party to a more general liberal party. In 1984 Uffe Ellemann-Jensen was elected chairman, and by profiling the liberal ideology in sharp confrontation to the Social Democrats, for example by campaigning for a reduction of the public sector, increasing market management and privatisation, and by being pro-EU, the party returned to its historical position as the biggest liberal party in the 1990s.[14]

After a disappointing 1998 general election, Ellemann-Jensen resigned as chairman and Anders Fogh Rasmussen was elected in his place. He immediately changed the party's usual confrontational strategy, instead appealing to the political centre. In the 2001 general elections the party campaigned for tighter immigration policies and a "tax stop", which proved successful and the party once again became the biggest in parliament, winning 31.2% of the vote and 56 seats. Venstre formed a coalition government with the Conservative People's Party and the Danish People's Party. For the first time since 1929 a liberal government was no longer dependent on the centre parties. Despite a small decline in both the 2005 general elections (29% and 52 seats) and the 2007 general elections (26.2% and 46 seats), the party remained the biggest and the coalition government continued.[14]

On 5 April 2009, Fogh Rasmussen resigned as chairman, instead serving as Secretary General of NATO. In his place Lars Løkke Rasmussen was elected.[15]

2009–present

In the 2011 general elections, the party gained 26.7% of the vote and 47 seats, but was not able to form a government, instead leading the opposition against Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt's Social Democratic coalition.

Even though the party lost voter support in the 2015 general elections, only gaining 19.5% of the vote, the party formed a minority government. This government was short-lived, and in 2016 Løkke Rasmussen invited the Conservative People's Party and the Liberal Alliance to form a coalition government instead.[16]

During the campaign of the 2019 general elections, Løkke Rasmussen published an autobiography, in which he opened up for the possibility of forming a government with the Social Democrats.[17] This was seen as controversial in the liberal "blue bloc", and Social Democratic leader Mette Frederiksen immediately declined the proposition.[18]

Following internal fighting in the party, Løkke Rasmussen and vice chairman Kristian Jensen both resigned on 31 August 2019. On 21 September 2019, political spokesman and former Minister for Environment and Food Jakob Ellemann-Jensen was elected the party's next chairman.[19]

Following the 2022 general election, in which Venstre suffered its worst result since 1988, Venstre joined a grand coalition government led by Social Democrat leader Mette Frederiksen, and also comprising the Moderates, a Venstre splinter formed by former Prime Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen.[20]

Ideology

Venstre is categorised as centre-right on the political spectrum,[7] although it has been also described as centrist[21][22] and right-wing.[23][24][25][26] Ideologically, it has been described as conservative-liberal,[27][2][3][4][26] liberal-conservative,[28][29][30][31] liberal,[32][33][34][35] conservative,[26][36] classical-liberal,[37] and agrarian.[26] Additionally, Venstre takes a nativist stance regarding immigration and asylum-seeking; they had also said that "immigrants should learn Danish and understand and respect Danish culture and traditions".[38][39]

Venstre is an economically liberal party[32][40] within the Nordic agrarian tradition,[41] and today is notably more pro–free market than its sister parties.[42][needs update] Since the elections in 2001, Venstre has enacted a so-called "tax stop" in order to halt the growth in taxes seen during the previous eight years under the Social Democrats. This tax stop has been under heavy fire from the parties on the left wing of Danish politics, allegedly for being "asocial" and "only for the rich."[43][44]

Prominent members

Prime ministers

Party leaders since 1929

No.PortraitLeaderTook officeLeft officeTime in office
1Madsen, ThomasThomas Madsen-Mygdal
(1876–1943)
1929194111–12 years
2Kristensen, KnudKnud Kristensen
(1880–1962)
194119497–8 years
3Sørensen, EdvardEdvard Sørensen
(1893–1954)
194919500–1 years
4Eriksen, ErikErik Eriksen
(1902–1972)
195024 May 196514–15 years
5Hartling, PoulPoul Hartling
(1914–2000)
24 May 1965December 197712 years, 191 days
6Christophersen, HenningHenning Christophersen
(1939–2016)
September 197823 July 19845 years, 326 days
7Ellemann, UffeUffe Ellemann-Jensen
(1941–2022)
23 July 198418 March 199813 years, 238 days
8Rasmussen, AndersAnders Fogh Rasmussen
(born 1953)
18 March 199817 May 200911 years, 60 days
9Rasmussen, LarsLars Løkke Rasmussen
(born 1964)
17 May 200931 August 201910 years, 106 days
Jensen, KristianKristian Jensen
(born 1971)
Acting
31 August 201921 September 201921 days
10Jensen, KristianJakob Ellemann-Jensen
(born 1973)
21 September 201923 October 20234 years, 32 days
Lose, StephanieStephanie Lose [dk]
(born 1982)
Acting
23 October 202318 November 202326 days
11Poulsen, Troels LundTroels Lund Poulsen
(born 1976)
18 November 2023Incumbent196 days

Origin of the name

The fact that the major centre-right political party in a country calls itself 'Left' is often confusing to foreign (and sometimes Danish) observers. The name has, however, its historical explanation. At the time of its foundation, Venstre affirmed then-progressive ideas in the Danish parliament. Their opponents, Højre (Right), the forerunner of the present-day Conservative People's Party, advocated for established interests, particularly the Church of Denmark and the landed gentry. In current Danish politics there is a clear distinction between the concepts of Venstre (Left, i.e., the party bearing that name) and venstrefløj (left wing, i.e., socialist and other left-leaning parties). The use of the word for "left" in the name of the Danish political party Radikale Venstre (literally: "Radical Left") and the Norwegian party Venstre is meant to refer to liberalism and not socialism.

Members of the party are referred to as venstremænd and venstrekvinder, respectively "Venstre men" and "Venstre women" (singular: -mand, -kvinde).

Election results

Parliament

ElectionVotes%Seats+/-Government
1872
53 / 104
NewOpposition
1873
51 / 104
2Opposition
1876
74 / 104
23Opposition
1879
65 / 104
9Opposition
1881
(May)
69 / 102
4Opposition
1881
(Jul)
75 / 102
6Opposition
188480,00056.3 (#1)
81 / 102
6Opposition
1887132,00058.1 (#1)
74 / 102
7Opposition
1890123,00053.0 (#1)
75 / 102
1Opposition
189263,00028.1 (#3)
30 / 102
45Opposition
189589,53040.5 (#1)
53 / 114
23Opposition
189898,07043.6 (#1)
63 / 114
10Opposition
1901103,49545.9 (#1)
76 / 114
13Majority
1903121,35749.4 (#1)
73 / 114
3Majority
190694,27231.2 (#1)
56 / 114
17Minority
190977,94924.0 (#1)
37 / 114
19Minority (1909)
Opposition (1909–1910)
1910118,90234.1 (#1)
57 / 114
20Majority
1913103,91728.6 (#2)
44 / 114
13Opposition
19158,08162.8 (#1)
43 / 114
1Opposition
1918269,64629.4 (#1)
45 / 140
2Opposition
1920
(Apr)
350,56334.2 (#1)
48 / 140
3Minority
1920
(Jul)
344,35136.1 (#1)
51 / 140
3Minority
1920
(Sep)
411,66134.0 (#1)
51 / 149
0Minority
1924362,68228.3 (#2)
44 / 149
7Opposition
1926378,13728.3 (#2)
46 / 149
2Minority
1929402,12128.3 (#2)
43 / 149
3Opposition
1932381,86224.7 (#2)
38 / 149
5Opposition
1935292,24717.8 (#2)
28 / 149
10Opposition
1939309,35518.2 (#2)
30 / 149
2Opposition (1939–1940)
Coalition (1940–1943)
1943376,85018.7 (#3)
28 / 149
2Coalition
1945479,15823.4 (#2)
38 / 149
10Minority
1947 [c]529,06627.6 (#2)
49 / 150
8Opposition
1950438,18821.3 (#2)
32 / 151
14Coalition
1953
(Apr)
456,89622.1 (#2)
33 / 151
1Coalition
1953
(Sep)
499,65623.1 (#2)
42 / 179
9Opposition
1957578,93225.1 (#2)
45 / 179
3Opposition
1960512,04121.1 (#2)
38 / 179
7Opposition
1964547,77020.8 (#2)
38 / 179
0Opposition
1966539,02719.3 (#2)
35 / 179
3Opposition
1968530,16718.6 (#3)
34 / 179
1Coalition
1971450,90415.6 (#3)
30 / 179
4Opposition
1973374,28312.3 (#3)
22 / 179
8Minority
1975711,29823.3 (#2)
42 / 179
20Opposition
1977371,72812.0 (#3)
21 / 179
21Opposition (1977–1978)
Coalition (1978–1979)
1979396,48412.5 (#2)
22 / 179
1Opposition
1981353,28011.3 (#4)
20 / 179
2Opposition (1981–1982)
Coalition (1982–1984)
1984405,73712.1 (#3)
22 / 179
2Coalition
1987354,29110.5 (#4)
19 / 179
3Coalition
1988394,19011.8 (#4)
22 / 179
3Coalition
1990511,64315.8 (#3)
29 / 179
7Coalition (1990–1993)
Opposition (1993–1994)
1994775,17623.3 (#2)
42 / 179
13Opposition
1998817,89424.0 (#2)
42 / 179
0Opposition
20011,077,85831.2 (#1)
56 / 179
14Coalition
2005974,63629.0 (#1)
52 / 179
4Coalition
2007908,47226.2 (#1)
46 / 179
6Coalition
2011947,72526.7 (#1)
47 / 179
1Opposition
2015685,18819.5 (#3)
34 / 179
13Minority (2015–2016)
Coalition (2016–2019)
2019825,48623.4 (#2)
43 / 179
9Opposition
2022460,54613.3 (#2)
23 / 179
20Coalition

Local elections

Municipal elections
YearSeats
#±
1925
2,291 / 11,289
1929
2,615 / 11,329
324
1933
2,692 / 11,424
77
1937
2,374 / 11,425
318
1943
2,217 / 10,569
157
1946
2,519 / 11,488
302
1950
2,342 / 11,499
177
1954
2,353 / 11,505
11
1958
2,405 / 11,529
52
1962
2,196 / 11,414
209
1966
1,747 / 10,005
449
Municipal reform
1970
1,080 / 4,677
667
1974
1,277 / 4,735
197
1978
1,155 / 4,759
122
1981
1,240 / 4,769
85
1985
1,201 / 4,773
39
1989
1,261 / 4,737
60
1993
1,601 / 4,703
340
1997
1,557 / 4,685
44
2001
1,666 / 4,647
109
Municipal reform
2005
804 / 2,522
862
2009
699 / 2,468
105
2013
767 / 2,444
68
2017
688 / 2,432
79
2021
620 / 2,436
68
 
Regional elections
YearSeats
#±
1935217,375
124 / 299
New
1943300,241
123 / 299
1
1946368,040
139 / 299
16
1950348,861
128 / 299
11
1954355,295
127 / 299
1
1958412,111
135 / 303
8
1962387,628
127 / 301
8
1966402,574
115 / 303
12
Municipal reform
1970449,479
95 / 366
20
1974400,062
98 / 370
3
1978411,812
90 / 370
8
1981457,565
84 / 370
6
1985418,149
83 / 374
1
1989451,807
89 / 374
6
1993717,536
125 / 374
36
1997665,857
124 / 374
1
2001963,220
139 / 374
15
Municipal reform
2005744,466
60 / 205
79
2009648,903
54 / 205
6
2013809,664
62 / 205
8
2017
54 / 205
8
2021
54 / 205
0
 
Mayors
YearSeats
No.±
2005
35 / 98
2009
31 / 98
4
2013
48 / 98
17
2017
37 / 98
11
2021
35 / 98
2

European Parliament

Election year# of votes% of votes# of seats won+/-Notes
1979252,76714.5 (#3)
3 / 16
1984248,39712.5 (#4)
2 / 16
1
1989297,56516.6 (#3)
3 / 16
1
1994394,36219.0 (#1)
4 / 16
1
1999460,83423.4 (#1)
5 / 16
1
2004366,73419.4 (#2)
3 / 14
2
2009474,04120.2 (#2)
3 / 13
0
2014379,84017.7 (#3)
2 / 13
1
2019648,20323.5 (#1)
4 / 14
2

European representation

In the European Parliament, Venstre sits in the Renew Europe group with four MEPs.[45][46][47][48]

In the European Committee of the Regions, Venstre sits in the Renew Europe CoR group, with three full and two alternate members for the 2020–2025 mandate.[49][50]

Youth and student wings

See also

Notes

References

Further reading

  • Tom Matz (2004), Venstre ved du hvor du har (in Danish). ForlagsKompagniet: Nørhaven Book.

External links