The former prime minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen lacked the will to lead parties in the VLAK-government.

It says the previous culture and church affairs for the Liberal Alliance, Mette Bock in an interview with TV 2.

I experienced a lack of willingness to lead and get three different parties – and we were the three different parties – to operate in a joint project, she says to the tv station.

– What happens in a multi-party government, is that it’s easy to find the lowest common denominators instead of in the community to formulate a vision. We did actually some very good tracks in the government, but it did not really get it up to fly.

Mette Bock criticises the Loop style of management, under the former VLAK-government. Photo: Jens Dresling

The previous government sat in power in the period 2016 to 2019 and consisted of the parties of the Left, Liberal Alliance and the Conservatives.

In this period there were many political disputes, especially between the Liberal Alliance and støttepartiet the Danish people’s Party.

– There is no doubt that the Danish people’s Party has had a leadership, for whom it was important to beat down everything that came from the Liberal Alliance. It was thankfully not, says Mette Bock.

– But there must also be one for the children, which helps to create the energy and belief that we can do something together. Seen from my ministerstole could well have been a better management, she says.

Former prime minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen italesatte then the many conflicts, among other things, when he asserted that the bourgeois-liberal Denmark stood at a crossroads.

– We can let it all fall on the floor, or we can draw together and work us on. The government wants and the government have chosen the last, he said shortly before christmas 2017.

At the general Election in June 2019, the had Loop, however, not much left over for the blue collaboration. Now he wanted instead to form a government consisting of the Left and the Social democrats.

Ekstra Bladet has tried to get a comment from both Mette Bock, Lars Løkke Rasmussen. They have not returned our inquiries.