Problems continue to pile up for Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt.
As her approval ratings continue to dive, a new Epinion survey for DR News shows that nearly one hundred thousand voters have deserted the Social Democrats - 43,000 heading leftwards to the Red/Green Alliance, while on the other side of the political spectrum, the Liberals and Danish People's Party have picked up around 25,000 each.
The same poll also shows that the number of voters who believe the Prime Minister is doing a good job has shrunk to 32 per cent, from 42 per cent a month ago, and nearly two-thirds of the electorate believe she's performing badly, compared to half in February.
Yet another poll showed that the Social Democrats' own voters are ready to ditch Ms Thorning-Schmidt in favour of the more left-wing Employment Minister Mette Frederiksen. Only 35 per cent believe the Prime Minister to be a strong leader while the rest characterise her as 'weak', or even 'very weak'.
Analysts blamed the negativity, and the voter exodus, on the Social Democrats' tough stance on benefits recipients, the congestion charge fiasco, the torture debate, and the most recent controversy surrounding the PM's closest political advisor Noa Reddington