Misplaced Pages

National Liberal Party (Denmark)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "National Liberal Party" Denmark – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (May 2007) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Political party in Denmark
National Liberal Party De Nationalliberale
Founded1842
Dissolved1882
IdeologyLiberalism
National liberalism
Economic liberalism
Constitutionalism

The National Liberal Party (Danish: De Nationalliberale) was a Danish political party or political movement from 1842 until 1882.

Often considered "the first Danish political party" the National Liberals were gradually founded as the opposition against the Danish absolute monarchy. It was inspired by German movements and its base was merchants, industrials, officials and especially students and academics. Among its leading figures were Orla Lehmann, Ditlev Gothard Monrad, Andreas Frederik Krieger, Carl Ploug and Carl Christian Hall but many elder businessmen and officials were leaders until the 1840s.

Its political goal was a constitutional government and free liberal economy, mixed with a strong national attitude towards the Germans, especially on the Schleswig-Holstein Question. It gradually grew stronger during the 1840s, and at the crisis and fall of absolutism 1848 it was the driving force. After a short participation in cabinet it went into opposition until 1854. From then and until 1864 it was the leading Danish party especially led by Hall. Its press became an indisputable political factor. Besides it carried through some economic liberal reforms.

Its inability to handle the difficult Schleswig question led to defeat in the Second Schleswig War (1864), which ended its power, and also damaged the prestige of the party. During the next years it went into the background. In 1866–75 it was the coalition partner of Højre, and soon most National Liberal veterans joined the conservative side. From about 1880 the party was quietly dissolved, split between the new combatants of the Constitutional Struggle of Denmark.

Election results

Parliament (Folketing)

Date Seats
# ±
1849 42 / 101 New
1852 47 / 101 Increase 5
1853 (feb) 40 / 101 Decrease 7
1853 (may) 33 / 101 Decrease 7
1854 78 / 101 Increase 45
1855 78 / 101 Steady 0
1858 20 / 101 Decrease 58
1861 46 / 101 Increase 26
1864 40 / 101 Decrease 6
1865 20 / 101 Decrease 20
1866 (jun) 20 / 101 Steady 0
1866 (oct) 20 / 104 Steady 0
1869 27 / 104 Increase 7
1869 27 / 104 Increase 7
18721873 Did not run.
1876 19 / 104 Increase 19
1879 10 / 104 Decrease 9

References

  1. Sir Richard Francis Burton (1875). Ultima Thule: Or, A Summer in Iceland. Original from the University of Michigan: W.P. Nimmo. p. 104. National Liberal Party denmark.
  2. In alliance with The Society of the Friends of Peasants.
  3. In alliance with The Society of the Friends of Peasants.
Denmark Political parties in Denmark
Bracketed numbers indicate numbers of seats in the respective parliaments.
Folketing
Government
Supporting
Opposition
Faroe Islands Faroe Islands
Greenland Greenland
European Parliament
Formerly represented


Stub icon

This article about politics in Denmark is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: