All 31 seats in the Inatsisartut 16 seats needed for a majority
Turnout
74.59% ( 1.41 pp)
Party
Leader
%
Seats
+/–
Siumut
Hans Enoksen
28.80%
10
−1
Inuit Ataqatigiit
Josef Motzfeldt
25.59%
8
+1
Atassut
Augusta Salling
20.42%
7
−1
Democrats
Per Berthelsen
16.10%
5
New
Kattusseqatigiit
Anthon Frederiksen
5.34%
1
−3
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Results by municipality
Prime Minister before
Prime Minister after
Jonathan Motzfeldt Siumut
Hans Enoksen Siumut
Politics of Greenland
Constitution
Constitution
Act of Succession
Freedom of Speech and the Press
Taxation
The Crown
Monarch
King Frederik X
Privy Council
Purveyors to the Royal Court
Realm
Kingdom of Denmark (The unity of the Realm)
Greenland
Denmark
Faroe Islands
Executive
Regeringen The Government of the Kingdom of Denmark
Government
Frederiksen II
Prime Minister (list)
Mette Frederiksen
Government Offices
Ministries
High Commissioner (list)
Julie Præst Wilche
Naalakkersuisut The Government of Greenland
Government
Egede II
Premier (list)
Múte Bourup Egede
Government Offices
Ministries
Privy Council
Council of State
Queen Margrethe II
Legislature
Inatsisartut Parliament of Greenland (20th National Parliament)
Speaker
Mimi Karlsen
Members
Folketinget Parliament of the Kingdom of Denmark (72nd Kingdom Parliament)
Speaker
Søren Gade
Members
Judiciary
Supreme Court
President
Poul Søgaard
High Court
Courts
Elections
Political parties
Recent elections
Parliament of the Kingdom of Denmark: 2011
2015
2019
Greenlandic Parliament: 2013
2014
2018
2021
Local elections: 2017
2021
Referendums
Act of Succession
Self-government
EEC membership
Home rule
Alcohol
Administrative divisions
Municipalities
Cities and towns
Unincorporated Areas:
National Park
Pituffik Space Base (Pituffik)
Foreign relations
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Minister: Steen Lynge
Diplomatic missions of / to Greenland
Nationality law
Passport
Visa requirements
Visa policy
Arctic policy of the Kingdom
Greenland–European Union relations
Overseas countries and territories
EU-OCT Association (OCTA)
Politics of the European Union
Arctic policy of the EU
Related topics
Arctic Command
Defence Command
Politics of Denmark
Politics of the Faroe Islands
Unitarism
Self rule
Other countries
v
t
e
General elections were held in Greenland on 3 December 2002.[1] The result was victory for the Siumut party, which won 10 of the 31 seats in the Parliament.[1]
^ abKingdom of Denmark, Territory of Greenland, Legislative Election of 3 December 2002 Archived 7 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine Adam Carr
and 27 Related for: 2002 Greenlandic general election information
Generalelections were held in Greenland on 3 December 2002. The result was victory for the Siumut party, which won 10 of the 31 seats in the Parliament...
Generalelections were held in Greenland on 22 November 2005. The result was a victory for Siumut, whose leader Hans Enoksen remained Prime Minister....
with 43.7% of the vote. Kleist set a new record for most votes in a Greenlandicelection with 5,461 received. This compares with Akitsinnguaq Olsen who was...
Generalelections were held in Greenland on 5 March 1991. Siumut emerged as the largest party in the Parliament, winning 11 of the 27 seats. Nordic Statistical...
Generalelections were held in Greenland on 4 March 1995. Siumut remained the largest party in the Parliament, winning 12 of the 31 seats. Nordic Statistical...
Generalelections were held in Greenland on 16 February 1999. Siumut remained the largest party in the Parliament, winning 11 of the 31 seats. Nordic...
Greenland elects on national level a legislature. The Greenlandic Parliament (Inatsisartut in Greenlandic) has 31 members of parliament, elected for a four-year...
Greenland in January 1979, the party won 13 of 21 seats in the 1979 Greenlandicgeneralelection for the newly formed Parliament of Greenland, and party chairman...
programme from January 1977 stated that its purpose was to "promote Greenlandic home rule within the Unity of the Realm" and "work against secession...
Greenland (Greenlandic: Kalaallit Nunaat, pronounced [kalaːɬːit nʉnaːt]; Danish: Grønland, pronounced [ˈkʁɶnˌlænˀ]) is a North American island autonomous...
Denmark, the Faroe Islands, and Greenland. The name was used by Danish and Greenlandic authorities in the negotiations for home rule introduced in 1979, and...
Nuuk (Greenlandic pronunciation: [nuːk] ; Danish: Nuuk, formerly Godthåb [ˈkʌtˌhɔˀp]) is the capital of and most populous city in Greenland, an autonomous...
Jakob Edvard Kuupik Kleist (born 31 March 1958) is a Greenlandic politician who served as the fourth prime minister of Greenland between 2009 and 2013...
2018 she announced that she would be running in the 2018 Greenlandic parliamentary election for the Siumut breakaway Nunatta Qitornai. Born in Narsaq...
former colonial centers in Europe. A notable example is the sizable Greenlandic Inuit community in Denmark. In the 20th and 21st centuries, Indigenous...
introducing separate Greenlandic banknotes. The Act entered into force on 1 June 2007. In the autumn of 2010, a new Greenlandic government indicated that...
Icelandic explorers settled on its southwestern coast. The ancestors of the Greenlandic Inuit who live there today appear to have migrated there later, around...
the Greenlandic Inuit, encouraging them to adopt the majority language, culture and religion. Denmark has been greatly criticised by the Greenlandic community...
the Greenlandic Parliament 15–0 with 12 abstentions, and later by the Danish Parliament 104–1. The first same-sex couple to register did so in 2002. Registered...
Ellen Sharpe Christoffersen (née Kristensen; born 17 March 1972) is a Greenlandic politician and member of the Atassut party. Ellen Kristensen was born...
Peoples, who comprise the majority in Finland; other ethnic groups are the Greenlandic Inuit, the Sami people and recent immigrants and their descendants. Historically...
Overseas Countries and territories (OCT) status. In recent years, the Greenlandic withdrawal from the European Communities has marginally been referred...
Also Vanuatu. Direct election by popular vote: Example: Israel, 1996–2001, where the prime minister was elected in a generalelection, with no regard to...
Parliament. Following the Conservative Party's victory at the 2015 generalelection as a main manifesto pledge, the legal basis for the EU referendum was...
undervisning" [Books on Greenland's Nature from Aarhus University to the Greenlandic High school Curriculum]. Archived from the original on 27 April 2010...
establishment of home-rule and eurosceptic Siumut winning the 1979 Greenlandic parliamentary election, a referendum on membership was agreed upon, in which the...