In June 2016, the United Kingdom voted to leave the EU. Eurosceptics elsewhere in the EU were encouraged by this decision, although its consequences had yet to emerge.
At the moment we are awaiting the results of the UK negotiations with the EU, on what kind of relationship Great Britain will enter into with the EU. I am pretty sure that the result will be such that it could be interesting to have the Danish voters to vote on it as well.[7]
In 2020, Morten Messerschmidt, leader of the DPP since 2022, said that his country might leave the European Union within the next few years due to what he believed would be "the success of Brexit".[10]
Political positions
As of 2023, membership of the European Union has broad support across the Danish political spectrum, including from the governing Social Democratic Party[11] and the main opposition Venstre.[12] The right-wing parties Danish People's Party and the New Right party support leaving the EU.[5][13] Together, the two parties hold 10 of the 179 seats in the Danish parliament (as of July 2023).[14]
Although historically eurosceptic, the left-wing Unity List dropped its policy of supporting a membership referendum in 2019 as a result of the troubled Brexit negotiations.[15] It now advocates for reform of EU policies.[16] In 2022 it removed the wish to leave the EU from its manifesto, instead describing a "perspective" to leave the EU.[17] This was not without controversy within the party.[18][19]
The classical liberal and libertarianLiberal Alliance tends to favour radically reforming and rolling back powers of the EU to protect Danish sovereignty, but individual politicians within the party and its youth branch at times but not any more endorse a complete withdrawal with some arguing that Denmark should leave the EU while maintaining single-market access.[20][21][22]
History
Denmark has been a member of the EU since 1973 and a majority support continued Danish membership of the EU.[7]Greenland, after establishing home rule in 1979, voted to leave the European Communities in 1982 while remaining a country of the Kingdom of Denmark. Denmark has twice voted against closer union: in 1992, the Danes voted against ratification of the Treaty of Maastricht,[23] but approved it after the Danish Government renegotiated its terms to secure Danish opt-outs from some of its provisions;[8] in 2000 in another referendum,[8] Denmark decided by a small majority not to join the euro, but Danmarks Nationalbank continued its policy of maintaining a fixed exchange rate between the Danish krone and the euro.[24]
^People's Movement against the EU: A representative poll shows Danes divided in the question of EU membership, People's Movement against the EU, 8 April 2020 (in Danish) The poll question was: If a Nordic cooperation could be established, consisting of Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden with common policies within a great number of issues, e.g. environment, judicial and foreign policy, as well as trade agreements with the EU and other countries – and you had the choice between Denmark participating in the Nordic cooperation or be a member of the EU. Then what would you vote for?