Danish PM wins third term

Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen led his centre-right coalition to a third term in power in parliamentary elections…

Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen led his centre-right coalition to a third term in power in parliamentary elections yesterday, promising voters he would lower taxes and maintain a tough stance on asylum-seekers.

Rasmussen, 54, fought a close race with Social Democrat leader Helle Thorning-Schmidt, 40, who argued in her campaign that Danes would have to sacrifice better welfare for tax cuts.

"It's historic that for the third election in a row the Liberals are Denmark's biggest party," Rasmussen told supporters after the election.

He said later that he would live up to all his campaign promises, despite his reduced majority.

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"We presented five comprehensive reforms when elections were called," he said. "It is my intention to pass them in the Danish parliament."

Rasmussen's Liberal-Conservative coalition and its far-right ally, the Danish People's Party (DPP), took a total of 90 seats in the 179-seat parliament.

While the bloc's outright majority was in question earlier in the vote count, it was assured after a supporting party won one of two seats in Danish territory the Faroe Islands.

The bloc held 94 seats before yesterday's vote

The minority Liberal-Conservative coalition has held power with support in parliament from the anti-immigrant DPP.

In 2005, the prime minister won a new term with similar pledges and a commitment to support Denmark's extensive welfare state. Rasmussen was at the centre of a crisis last year when he refused to apologise for cartoons depicting the Prophet Mohammad published in a Danish newspaper.

The veteran politician called Tuesday's election 15 months earlier than required in what analysts said was a bid to capitalise on a strong economy and 33-year low unemployment ahead of thorny public sector wage talks.