Greenland’s political leaders have launched a blistering attack on US President Donald Trump over his repeated suggestion that it should become part of the United States. In a rare joint ...
"We -- all party leaders -- cannot accept the repeated statements about annexation and control of Greenland," the leaders of Greenland's five parliamentary parties said in a joint statement posted ...
U.S. President Donald Trump reiterated his desire for the United States to annex Greenland, calling the move essential for international security. During a meeting with NATO Secretary-General Mark ...
Outgoing Greenlandic Prime Minister Mute B Egede said he called the party leaders together because "we need to tighten our rejection of Trump" Greenland's leading political parties have issued a ...
Reaching the northernmost, ice-covered limits of Greenland has long been tricky; limited transportation made it one of the most isolated places on Earth. That’s changing following the November ...
Greenland's center-right opposition party Demokraatit won the country's parliamentary election with 29.9% of the vote, ahead of the ruling left-wing coalition. Party leader Jens-Frederik Nielsen ...
Greenland's independence party, Narelaq, which seeks the fastest break up with Denmark, is on its way to get a major boost as per early trends of counting of votes at the parliamentary elections ...
Greenland’s Demokraatit party, which favors a slower approach to the island’s independence from Denmark and has been critical of President Donald Trump serious push to takeover the territory ...
The opposition Demokraatit Party has won elections in Greenland, receiving nearly 30% of the votes. The world took unusual notice of Tuesday's parliamentary election after US President Donald Trump ...
In 2019 then-president Trump said he wished to to gain control of the mineral-rich Arctic territory sparking a diplomat spat with Denmark with a first offer to buy Greenland. At that time ...
Greenland's government is currently led by Prime Minister Múte Bourup Egede of the left-wing Inuit Ataqatigiit party. Elections are held every four years to choose members of the Inatsisartut ...
Elections in Greenland, an island home to about 57,000 people, are usually a local affair. There is little opinion polling, with only two newspapers in the Danish autonomous territory ...