Mette Frederiksen, Denmark’s Social Democrat leader, has at last cobbled together a governing coalition after months of political horse-trading that laid bare the fractious state of European politics. For those of us who watch the real economy, this is not just a story of Copenhagen corridors. It is a story of what happens when the machinery of state stalls and working people are left waiting for decisions on the price of fuel, the security of welfare, and the strength of their unions.
Frederiksen’s new government is a three-party alliance that stretches from the centre-left to the centre-right. It is a compromise of necessity, not of vision. The negotiations dragged on because no single bloc could command a majority. Splinter parties, regional interests, and a surge in green and anti-immigration votes have made every coalition a jigsaw puzzle. This is the reality of EU politics today: instability at the top, uncertainty at the bottom.
The man on the factory floor in Aalborg or the woman stacking shelves in Aarhus does not care much for the fine print of coalition agreements. They care about whether their wages will keep pace with inflation. Denmark has long been a beacon of high union membership and collective bargaining. But the chaos in parliament threatens that model. When politicians cannot form a government, they cannot legislate on labour rights, housing costs, or energy subsidies.
Frederiksen’s previous term was marked by a tough line on immigration and a robust welfare state. Now she must balance the demands of the centre-right, who want tax cuts and deregulation, and her own Social Democrats, who promise to protect public services. It is a tightrope act, and one misstep could send the whole fragile structure crashing down.
Meanwhile, across the EU, similar dramas play out. In Germany, coalition talks have become a sport. In France, the president has resorted to executive orders. In Italy, governments collapse with alarming regularity. The European project was built on stability and consensus. Now it is a laboratory of fragmented parliaments and fragile alliances.
For the working class, this is not an abstract debate. A government that cannot form quickly is a government that cannot act quickly. When energy prices spike, when a plant threatens to close, when the cost of bread rises, people need a government that can respond. The delays mean real hardship.
Frederiksen has promised a “broad, responsible government”. She has pledged to tackle climate change, preserve the welfare state, and maintain a tough line on immigration. But the coalition deal is thin on specifics. The devil will be in the detail of budgets and labour law.
In the North of England, where I grew up, we know the cost of political dithering. The industrial heartlands were hollowed out while Westminster argued. Copenhagen is not Manchester, but the pattern is the same: when politicians squabble, ordinary people pay.
Denmark’s new government is a reminder that democracy is messy. But it is also a warning that the mess must not become the norm. The real economy cannot wait for a coalition to find common ground.








