Whether the newly elected member of parliament Qarsoq Høegh-Dam from the Naleraq party leans towards a blue, red or centre government is unknown.
But he is open to pointing to the Social Democrats' Mette Frederiksen as prime minister.
He tells DR on Tuesday, after he has been to negotiations in the Prime Minister's Office with the royal investigator and acting prime minister, Mette Frederiksen.
- Of course we can. But it depends on many things. We have good dialogue, he answers DR when asked whether he would be able to point to Mette Frederiksen.
He adds that "as long as Greenland gets its way, we are happy".
When he was at the first government negotiations at Marienborg two weeks ago, he would not answer whether he could support Mette Frederiksen as Prime Minister.
Here it was said that Greenland, according to him, had "come with a clear voice". He would not elaborate on what that voice was.
The other Greenlandic member of parliament, Naaja Nathanielsen (IA), told DR on her way into the Prime Minister's Office on Tuesday that she has a special demand with her.
Denmark will not withdraw from international conventions.
- Withdrawing from conventions is a red line. It is the wrong signal to send in the current situation, where Greenland is still under a lot of pressure, and where international conventions and the rhetoric that is being used are being violated, she says.
She has previously said that she is leaning towards a red government. She said this when she was in Marienborg two weeks ago for the first negotiations.
- Right now I also have difficulty seeing what the constellation should be like if it were to be a blue government, she said before the meeting at Marienborg.
There she also made it clear that she is participating in the negotiations with a desire for Greenland to have more power over foreign policy.
As it is now, it is the Danish government that handles foreign policy matters on behalf of the Commonwealth.
/ritzau/