Greenland Democrats will announce a four -part coalition government on Friday after an election that took place in the shadow of the impulse of US President Donald Trump to take control of the territory, according to local media reports.
The announcement of the coalition is expected to coincide with the visit of the American vice president JD Vance to the Arctic Island. Vance’s travel plans, which initially caused tensions with Greenland and Denmark, include a visit to the US military base in Pituffik on Friday.
His original itinerary consisted of attending a local race with a dog’s tail with his wife, Usha, and national security advisor Mike Waltz, without an official invitation from the Greenland authorities.
According to the Greenland Knr station, the coalition will be presented at 1100 local time. A source familiar with confirmed conversations to Reuters That the new government will be led by Jens-Frederik Nielsen, the leader of the Democrats in favor of business, who saw his party elevated 10 seats in the elections of March 11.
Nielsen has urged the parties to set aside their differences to establish a wide coalition government, which demonstrates the unit in the middle of Trump’s current campaign to Annexar Greenland.
The coalition, which covers various political ideologies, will have 23 of the 31 parliamentary seats. However, the Naleraq party in favor of Independence, which doubled its representation to eight seats, will not join the coalition, according to KNR and the Sermitsiaq newspaper.
Despite Trump’s insistence that Greenland is vital for the security of the United States, most grindlages reject the idea of becoming part of the United States. The interim prime minister, Mute Egede, has repeatedly emphasized that the future of the island will be determined by its people, not external forces.