$Unique_ID{COW01091} $Pretitle{411} $Title{Denmark Right of Liberty Assured Since 1849} $Subtitle{} $Author{Henning Dehn Nielsen} $Affiliation{Ministry of Foreign Affairs} $Subject{party constitution government parliament denmark people's elections new power parties} $Date{1990} $Log{Ships*0109101.scf } Country: Denmark Book: Facts about Denmark Author: Henning Dehn Nielsen Affiliation: Ministry of Foreign Affairs Date: 1990 Right of Liberty Assured Since 1849 [See Ships: Courtesy Embassy of Denmark, Washington DC] On the 5th of June each year the Danes celebrate their Constitution Day. The national flag is raised and all the known politicians go on the hustings to proclaim in open-air meetings the merits of the Constitution, upon which Danish democracy rests. It is on the basis of this Constitution that every Dane over the age of 18 has the power to influence the governing of the country by casting his vote on election day; and a long row of individual rights are guaranteed the citizen in one of the Constitution's chapters. "Personal liberty shall be inviolable", states the Constitution. "No Danish subject shall, in any manner whatsoever, be deprived of his liberty because of his political or religious convictions or because of his descent". It also states: "Any person shall be at liberty to publish his ideas in print, in writing, and in speech, subject to his being held responsible in a court of law. Censorship and other preventive measures shall never again be introduced." This Constitution was adopted as long ago as the 5th of June 1849, the goal being primarily to establish a new framework for governing the Kingdom of Denmark. It was in the wake of strong political foment in many of the European countries of the 1830s and 1840s, and a form of bloodless political revolution in Denmark, that it became clear that time had run out for the hitherto absolute power of the monarchy. And it was with a sigh, according to historians, that Denmark's King Frederik VII put his name to the new Constitution, whereafter the monarchy would share power with the people's elected representatives in Parliament and Government. The Constitution later has been altered on four occasions - the latest in 1953, when the hitherto upper chamber (Landstinget) was abolished and female succession to the throne was introduced. But in all of its main principles, the Constitution of 1849 still forms the basis of governing the Danish people today. Even if King Frederik VII all those years ago relinquished most of his power, monarchy still prevails in Denmark today. But the form of government is, in the words of the Constitution, a limited monarchism, founded on the Constitution. This is articulated in the Constitution's fundamental provision that legislative authority shall be vested in the King and Parliament conjointly, executive authority in the King and judicial authority in the courts of justice. This is put into practice in such a way that all legislation is handled and passed by Parliament, but does not become law until signed by the Queen; and that the Queen delegates her executive powers to members of the Government, which is answerable to Parliament. The Queen herself has no political power and is free of accountability. The principle of government by parliamentary majority de facto has been in existence since 1901, but not until the latest changes to the Constitution in 1953 was the de jure law established that no Minister can remain in office, after a parliamentary majority has approved a vote of no confidence in him, and that a no-confidence vote against the Prime Minister means that he goes to the Queen to submit his government's resignation if new parliamentary elections are not called. Any changes in the Constitution or in the voting age must be submitted to a national referendum, which also must take place in those situations when certain powers, normally entrusted to Parliament and Government, are to be delegated to authorities outside the Kingdom. Such referenda were arranged in 1972, when Denmark joined the European Community (EC), and in 1986, when Denmark agreed to certain changes in the Community's Treaty of Rome and to the adoption of a new declaration of foreign policy cooperation among the EC's member states. Danes today look upon the democratic rights of the 1849 Constitution as obvious and inalienable, and their particular value is enhanced, when comparisons are made with the status in other countries where the same freedom of scope does not exist. Danes were taught a harsh lesson in the value of freedom, when the Germans occupied Denmark from 1940 to 1945, and it was not surprising that the 5th of June festivities during those years were met with exceptional support. Many Parties Forming the Parliament When vital issues are on the agenda of the Folketing - Denmark's Parliament - and top politicians lock horns with one another, millions of Danes are glued to their television screens as if it were a major sporting event. Quite apart from the big debates. Danes follow with great interest all that happens in their parliament and a very large proportion of running public debate in the press and on TV is inspired by the political game surrounding parliamentary work. All this attention is focused on the 179 persons making up the parliamentary assembly, including two elected in each of the two self-governing regions of the Kingdom, the Faroes and Greenland. They are elected for periods of four years by general, direct and secret ballot, in which all Danes aged over 18 have the power to vote. In practice, however, only on two occasions since the Constitution was last changed in 1953 has Parliament sat out the full four-year period. The voting age since 1953 has been progressively lowered from 23 to the current 18. Women have been given the right to vote since 1915, and today 54 of Parliament's 179 members are women, a number seen as all too low by proponents of women's equality. Folketing elections take place when the political situation makes it necessary, either because the Prime Minister wishes to take the Government's general policies - or its position on a particular issue - to the people, or because it has become evident that the Government no longer commands a majority in Parliament and therefore must follow the customary practice of resigning and calling new elections. Up to close 90 per cent of the electorate usually take part in elections. Out of the 175 seats available in Parliament, not counting the representatives from the Faroes and Greenland, 135 are occupied by the winners of the electoral districts making up the country, while the remaining 40 seats are reserved for distribution among the parties, which have not gained the number of mandates proportionate to the amount of votes they have received. In order to be represented, a party must have gained at least two per cent of the valid votes cast nationwide. When elections are called today, there are many more parties competing for votes than in former days. Before 1960 Danish politics were dominated by four parties, which still exist in modernized form and which today are generally described as "the four old parties". There is the Social Democratic Party (Socialdemokratiet), based on the trade-union movement, but also with many other supporters; the Conservative People's Party (Det Konservative Folkeparti), with support mainly from business and higher salary public servants; the Liberal Party (Venstre, Danmarks Liberale Parti), which traditionally was the farmers' party but which has now gained support in urban areas; and finally the Radical Liberal Party (Det Radikale Venstre), the smallest of the four old parties with supporters particularly from the smaller farmers and urban intellectuals. This fixed pattern was broken in 1960, when the Socialist People's Party (Socialistisk Folkeparti), a party to the left of the Social Democratic Party, emerged at the Folketing elections. And, in 1967, a smaller, left-wing party, the Leftwing Socialists (Venstresocialisterne) was founded in a breakaway splinter from the Socialist People's Party. Both of these groups derive their main support from industrial workers and younger academics. At the 1973 elections - the most dramatic in Danish political history to date - no fewer than eleven parties took their place in Parliament. Most striking was that the new anti-tax Progress Party (Fremskridtspartiet) won no less than 28 seats. Other new parties included the Centre Democrats (Centrum-Demokraterne), which broke away from the Social Democrats, and the Christian People's Party (Kristeligt Folkeparti). At the latest elections, on 10 May 1988, the Folketing gained the following composition: Social Democratic Party - 55 Radical Liberal Party - 10 Conservative People's Party - 35 Socialist People's Party - 24 Centre Democrats - 9 Christian People's Party - 4 Liberal Party - 22 Progress Party - 16 In 1982 a coalition government was formed, comprised of the Conservative People's Party, the Liberal Party, and the two smaller Centre Democrats and Christian People's Party, the so-called "four-leaved clover government". This administration continued in power until the above - mentioned poll in May 1988, when the Centre Democrats and the Christian People's Party had to leave the government and were replaced by the Radical Liberal Party. The Conservatives' Poul Schluter has been Prime Minister since 1982, while Uffe Ellemann-Jensen of the Liberals has the portfolio of Foreign Minister. Christiansborg Palace is the seat of the Folketing. It opens the current session on the first Tuesday of October and recesses usually at the beginning of June. During this period, around 200 legislative proposals are dealt with. Each bill must have three readings before it can become law. Denmark Governed from an Isle in Copenhagen Denmark is governed from the isle of Slotsholmen in the middle of Copenhagen, and Christiansborg Palace and most of the ministries are located there. The description of an isle is apt, insofar as these focal points of power are totally surrounded by canals crossed by several bridges. And here one finds oneself in the very heart of the capital, as it was here that Bishop Absalon, the founder of Copenhagen, built his castle more than 800 years ago. The remains of this structure can still be seen under Christiansborg Palace, and close to one of the bridges leading to the isle towers a statue of the mounted Bishop Absalon himself. In the times when kings ruled with absolute power and the state apparatus was more simple, the whole administrative complex could be housed under one roof, in this case the still existent old Chancellery, also called the Red Building, which dates from 1715-20 and is next to Christiansborg Palace. This pompous old edifice with its thick walls still provides a solid framework for a row of ministerial offices, including the important Finance Ministry, in which one can find preserved the State's 17th century treasury coffer - beautifully crafted but now empty. With the passage of time, the ministerial offices have spread out over the whole of Slotsholmen, and a few years ago, the rapidly expanding Foreign Ministry ran out of space and was forced to relocate to a new complex overlooking the harbour nearby. There are 21 ministries under the central administration today, each with a member of the Government at its head with sole responsibility. For the most part, the ministries embrace the same functions as government departments in other countries: state finances, foreign affairs, defence, justice, social and cultural affairs, public transport, industry and many others. The number of ministries tends to vary somewhat according to the requirements of the State. Thus the Ministry of the Environment, dealing among other issues with problems of pollution, is relatively new, as is the Ministry of Energy, entrusted among other duties with the State's interests in the exploitation of oil and gas resources in the North Sea. Each ministry consists of a number of departments and directorates. Unlike many other countries, civil servants in the administration are not replaced when government changes hands, on the basis that they are considered loyal towards successive ministers regardless of their political colours, and this tradition has continued unbroken into contemporary times. Local government is exercised through 277 primary municipalities, each with its elected council and mayor. For the undertaking of tasks spanning larger areas and applying in particular to roads and hospitals, the country is divided into 14 county authorities, each with its elected county council and council chairman. Local and county elections take place every four years. For the coordination of, among other tasks, public transport and hospital networks in and around the area of Copenhagen, a metropolitan council has been created. It can happen in any country that a citizen feels himself unjustly treated by public administration. In such cases in Denmark, one can go to the Ombudsman, who comes under the responsibility of the Folketing, and who is charged with preventing arbitrary and unreasonable public service dispositions by preferring complaints against the particular administrative authority implicated in committing the error. This institution has been imitated in other countries, including Britain, where the Danish designation Ombudsman is maintained.