File photo of Danish Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt. (AFP)
Copenhagen:
Denmark's coalition government and its political allies on Monday led an opinion poll for the first time since November 2013, giving it a narrow lead over the opposition weeks before a June vote.
If elections were held today, the centre-left bloc backing Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt's coalition would win 50.5 per cent of the vote compared with 49.1 per cent for the right-wing opposition, according to pollster Voxmeter.
The survey marks a turnaround for the ruling bloc, which only last week was trailing the opposition with 45.6 per cent of voter sympathies compared with 54.3 per cent for the right-wing parties.
Opposition leader Lars Lokke Rasmussen is unpopular with voters after an expense scandal and came under fire last week for making allegedly exaggerated claims about how little a Danish worker on unemployment benefits stands to gain from taking a job.
The opposition needs the support of the anti-immigration Danish People's Party (DPP) to pass legislation in parliament but it's unclear if the party would seek to join a future government, which could limit its anti-establishment appeal.
Thorning-Schmidt on Wednesday called a general election for June 18, almost three months before a September 14 deadline and one day after the government announced a 39 billion kroner (5.2 billion euro, $5.7 billion) welfare spending package and raised its growth forecast for 2015.
Denmark was harder hit by the financial crisis than its Scandinavian neighbours, dipping in and out of recession, but an economic recovery is now taking hold and the country last week registered its seventh straight quarter of growth.
If elections were held today, the centre-left bloc backing Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt's coalition would win 50.5 per cent of the vote compared with 49.1 per cent for the right-wing opposition, according to pollster Voxmeter.
The survey marks a turnaround for the ruling bloc, which only last week was trailing the opposition with 45.6 per cent of voter sympathies compared with 54.3 per cent for the right-wing parties.
Opposition leader Lars Lokke Rasmussen is unpopular with voters after an expense scandal and came under fire last week for making allegedly exaggerated claims about how little a Danish worker on unemployment benefits stands to gain from taking a job.
The opposition needs the support of the anti-immigration Danish People's Party (DPP) to pass legislation in parliament but it's unclear if the party would seek to join a future government, which could limit its anti-establishment appeal.
Thorning-Schmidt on Wednesday called a general election for June 18, almost three months before a September 14 deadline and one day after the government announced a 39 billion kroner (5.2 billion euro, $5.7 billion) welfare spending package and raised its growth forecast for 2015.
Denmark was harder hit by the financial crisis than its Scandinavian neighbours, dipping in and out of recession, but an economic recovery is now taking hold and the country last week registered its seventh straight quarter of growth.
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