Greenland’s new parliament convenes for first time amid Trump pressure

Jens-Frederik Nielsen (C-L), new Prime Minister of Greenland and leader of the Demokraatit party, and MPs take part in a procession from Hans Egede house to Nuuk Cathedral, where a service is held during the constituent assembly in the Greenlandic parliament (Inatsisartut) in Nuuk, Greenland on April 7, 2025. (Emil Stach/Ritzau Scanpix/AFP via Getty Images)

Greenland’s new parliament convened for the first time on Monday after a general election in March, amid repeated expressions of interest by U.S. President Donald Trump to control the semi-autonomous Danish
island.

Jens-Frederik Nielsen, 33, who has called for political unity against external pressures since his Demokraatit (Democrats) party won the March election, took office as the youngest prime minister of Greenland and will face the challenges posed by Trump’s ambitions.

“It has never been more important to stand together for our country and stable governance. That’s why I’m happy with this broad coalition with 75% of the votes,” Nielsen said, according to Greenlandic broadcaster KNR.

Nielsen said last week Greenland would strengthen ties with Denmark, calling it “Greenland’s closest partner,” until the Arctic island could become a sovereign nation. He noted that the semi-autonomous Danish territory ultimately wishes to become independent.

The pro-business Democrats Party, which favors a slow march to independence, emerged as the winner last month in a general election, tripling its representation to 10 seats. The party said it would form a coalition government with three other parties.

The coalition, which spans much of the political spectrum, represents 23 of the 31 parliamentary seats. The Naleraq party, a staunch pro-independence party that doubled its seats to eight in the election, will not be part of the coalition.

Related stories from around the North: 

Canada: Affordability, national sovereignty top of mind for many Yukon voters, CBC News

Finland: US, Norwegian forces in Lapland for rapid reinforcement exercise, The Independent Barents Observer

Greenland: Danish leader tells the US ‘you cannot annex another country’ as she visits Greenland, Thomson Reuters

Norway:Trump slaps tariffs on Arctic islands with almost no export, CBC News 

SwedenSwedish defence working on developing military drone force, Radio Sweden

United States: White House releases U.S. Arctic strategy implementation plan, Eye on the Arctic

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