COPENHAGEN, Denmark -- Denmark unveiled a legal reform on Friday allowing foreigners who have been sentenced to at least one year of unconditional imprisonment for serious crimes to be deported.
While the crisis over Greenland, coveted by Donald Trump, has prompted some EU member states to consider strategic autonomy, others still don't believe Europe can defend itself without the US.
Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen acknowledged the government was acting "unconventionally" by not waiting for court decisions ...
Denmark has unveiled a deportation reform under which foreigners who are convicted of serious crimes, like aggravated assault ...
A 2019 video of Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen laughing uncontrollably as she recounts Denmark’s purchase of four ...
Donald Trump questioned Denmark's right to Greenland and said he is no longer interested in peace in January 2026 after he was snubbed for a Nobel prize, but a video circulating on social media does ...
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer met his Danish counterpart Mette Frederiksen Thursday. The previous day, Donald Trump drew ...
For the first time, Greenland’s premier Jens-Frederik Nielsen and Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen give a joint interview about their work to defend the Kingdom against threats from the world’s ...
After visiting Berlin on Tuesday, Danish Premier Mette Frederiksen was in Paris on Wednesday, where she had lunch with Emmanuel Macron at the Elysée Palace, together with Greenland's prime minister, ...
Frederiksen’s party has seen a dramatic surge in poll ratings through January — just months after awful results in last ...
Her comments came as several other European leaders on Wednesday addressed the widening strain in relations with Washington ...
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