COPENHAGEN, May 8 (Reuters) – The king of Denmark has asked Defence Minister Troels Lund Poulsen to ‌explore the formation of a potential centre-right government ‌following the breakdown of negotiations among centre-left parties, the royal palace ​said on Friday.

Denmark’s March election for parliament resulted in a fragmented assembly of 12 parties, with Social Democratic Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen leading negotiations since then, hoping ‌to secure a third ⁠term in office.

But Frederiksen’s talks with likely partners reached a stalemate in recent weeks, ⁠slowing down government decision making amid efforts to resolve a crisis in ties with U.S. President Donald Trump’s ​administration over ​Greenland.

On Friday, Lars Lokke ​Rasmussen and his centrist ‌Moderate Party ended talks with Frederiksen and proposed that the task of leading the negotiations should be given to Lund Poulsen, who heads the right-wing Liberal Party.

If Lund Poulsen succeeds in finding sufficient support from right-wing ‌and centrist groups, he could ​become prime minister. If he fails, ​the task of ​leading the talks will pass back to ‌Frederiksen or to one of ​the other party ​leaders.

Frederiksen’s Social Democrats, in power since 2019, won 38 seats in the 179-seat parliament, down from ​50 in 2022, ‌making it their worst election result since 1903.

(Reporting ​by Stine Jacobsen, Soren Jeppesen and Louise ​Rasmussen, editing by Terje Solsvik)