Last modified: 2021-08-25 by christopher oehler
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A part of the Danish electoral system: each party has a letter
(as long as less than 30 parties stand), and that is what get most
of the parties hype (instead of the party symbol/flag)
- for obvious reasons.
Ole Andersen, 04 Aug 1999
image by
Tomislav Todorović, 10 July 2013
National Socialist Movement of Denmark /(Danmarks Nationalsocialistiske
Bevaegelse)/ was founded in 1991 as the latest in the list of successor parties
to the original National Socialist Workers' Party of Denmark (see WW2 Danish flags),
which was disbanded in 1945 after the WW2 was ended. Its flag is red, with a
white swastika within a ring in same color. The best photo of it which can be
currently found is no longer on the Web; its original location was
here and a
miniature version can be still found at Google Image Search. (A
copy of this photo.)
A close-up photo showing the flag charges:
http://nyhederne.tv2.dk/article.php/id-38730715:nyt-naziparti-i-danmark.html?ss&fbs
(Image)
reveals that the swastika has visibly thinner arms than that on the
German Nazi flag and that the ring is as wide as the arms. The whole
device also seems to be somewhat smaller than the white disc on the
German Nazi flag, as can be also seen on a
photo from the party
website: Another photo
from the same source
reveals that the shade of red is the same as on the national flag,
while another one
reveals that the flag is somewhat more oblong than the national flag.
Tomislav Todorović, 10 July 2013
image by
Tomislav Todorović, 16 March 2016
Another flag is mosetimes used, which adds white initials DNSB to the
canton of national flag. A photo dating form 1999 can be found
here
(WARNING: displays people wearing swastikas and giving Roman salute)
(image
)
Tomislav Todorović, 16 March 2016
Danmarks Socialdemokratiske Ungdom (Denmark's Social-democratic Youth), DSU,
is the youth organisation of Socialdemokratiet (the Social-Democracy). At
election times, they create mock film posters to express their views regarding
the election. Their poster for the 2009 European Parliament elections included
EU flags where the field had been changed to red, to symbolise a political left
Europe, as opposed to the (not shown) EU flag, with it's blue field symbolising
a political right Europe.
See:
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 22 August 2009
This party popped up in Denmark in 1987,
and stood at the general election that year. They only got some 5600
votes, got nobody elected, and died (more or less). I recall the
infinity symbol. They used the letter "H" more
than the symbol.
Ole Andersen, 04 Aug 1999