Read more about what school choices are:
* School elections have been held every two years since 2015.
* It is a three-week teaching course that is structured as an election campaign, and it is the incumbent Prime Minister who kicks off the election campaign.
* Mette Frederiksen (S) did so on 26 September this year.
* Students come from over 750 primary schools. There are a little over 1000 primary schools in Denmark.
* This corresponds to approximately three out of four of the country’s primary schools participating, and the result is therefore not necessarily representative of how the total group of students would vote.
* These are the parties that are eligible to stand for parliamentary election no later than 1 June, before school elections are held, which the students can vote for.
* The students have chosen key issues, made campaigns and debated before they have ticked the party they most agree with on election night.
* There have also been debates between political youth parties at several of the schools.
* This year, tougher penalties for violence, tax-paid lunch in schools and the abolition of the top tax were among the most popular landmarks among children.
* This year, the election result shows that the Social Democrats are the largest party with 23.5 percent of the vote nationwide.
* In the three previous school elections, the blue block has run with the victory. In 2019, the Social Democrats received the most votes in the school election with 22.6 percent, but overall the blue bloc won with 51.2 percent.
* School elections are arranged by the Folketing and the Ministry of Children and Education in collaboration with the Danish Youth Council (DUF).
Sources: Skolevalg.dk and the Folketing.