Greenland’s likely new prime minister has rejected US President Donald Trump’s effort to take control of the island, saying Greenlanders must be allowed to decide their own future as it moves towards independence from Denmark.
Jens-Frederik Nielsen’s Demokraatit, a pro-business party that favours a slow path to independence, won a surprise victory in Tuesday’s parliamentary election, outpacing the two left-leaning parties that formed the previous government.
With most Greenlanders opposing Trump’s overtures, the campaign focused more on issues such as health care and education than on geopolitics.
But on Wednesday Nielsen was quick to push back against Trump, who last week told a joint session of Congress that the US needed Greenland to protect its own national security interests and he expected to get it “one way or the other”.
“We don’t want to be Americans. No, we don’t want to be Danes. We want to be Greenlanders, and we want our own independence in the future,” Nielsen, 33, told Britain’s Sky News.
“And we want to build our own country by ourselves.”
Greenland, a self-governing region of Denmark, has been on a path toward independence since at least 2009, when the government in Copenhagen recognised its right to self-determination under international law.
Four of the five main parties in the election supported independence, though they disagreed on when and how to achieve it.
The island of 56,000 people, most from Indigenous Inuit backgrounds, has attracted international attention since Trump announced his designs on it soon after returning to the White House in January.
Trump is focused on Greenland because it straddles strategic air and sea routes in the North Atlantic and is home to the US’s Pituffik Space Base, which supports missile warning and space surveillance operations.
Greenland also has large deposits of the rare earth minerals needed to make everything from mobile phones to renewable energy technology.
But Trump’s overtures were not on the ballot.
The 31 men and women elected to parliament on Tuesday will have to set priorities for issues such as diversifying Greenland’s economy, building infrastructure and improving health care, as well as shaping the country’s strategy for countering the president’s America First agenda.
Demokraatit won 30 per cent of the vote by campaigning to improve housing and educational standards while delaying independence until Greenland is self-sufficient.
Four years ago, the party finished in fourth place.
Demokraatit now has to turn its attention to forming a governing coalition.
Naleraq, the most aggressively pro-independence party, finished in second place followed by Inuit Ataqatigiit, which led the previous government.
Greenland Prime Minister Mute Bourup Egede in February called early elections, saying the country needed to be united during a “serious time” unlike anything Greenland had ever experienced.