The Folketing decided on 11 November 2020, that an impartial investigation of the 2020 Danish mink cull would take place. A political majority agreed on 10 December to the establishment of a new form of commission called an inquiry commission'
(') and having the case investigated by one such. On 23 April 2021 the Folketing sat up the Mink Commission.
Terms of reference According to the
Terms of reference of a commission of inquiry into the case of the culling of mink (''
),'' the commission had the task of:The Commission focused in particular on the 14 days leading up to the press conference, where the decision was announced to the public, as well as how ministers and other relevant people reacted when they became aware of problems with a lack of legal authority. Furthermore, an independent assessment must be made of whether there was legal authority to make the decision and whether anyone can be held legally responsible for the process. The terms of reference were in November expanded to also comprehend an investigation of the Rigspoliti's action card. However, the responsibilities of any ministers were not to be assessed. The health or veterinary basis for making the decision itself was not part of the commission's assessment.
Hearings Several officials expressed at the hearings, that they unambiguously had warned that there had not been the legal authority to require all mink culled. During the hearings four
assessors (''''), including the assessors for Frederiksen and her head of department, contested that there had lacked legal authority to cull all mink. On 13 November two officials testified to the commission, that Ministry of Food had indicated that "a total slaughter, including all breeding animals, is considered to be fatal for the industry". Allegedly, this assessment was supported by the Ministry of Justice and sent "up the system". Head of department in the Ministry of State
Barbara Bertelsen explained at the hearing on 18 November that she had not been made aware of the problem with the lack of legal authority. The testimony of Minister of Health Magnus Heunicke showed that the Minister of Health had taken handwritten notes from the meeting in the coordination committee, where the decision had been made. He explained, among other things, that the head of department in the Ministry of Justice, Johan Legarth, had initiated the meeting by claiming that SSI had indicated that all mink should be culled for reasons of public health. This memo was contradicted by the Prime Minister's Chief of Staff, Martin Justesen, who did not perceive that Legarth had made this statement, and he added that it would be highly unusual for an official to open such a meeting by presenting a conclusion. Frederiksen emphasised during her testimony that no one at the meeting on 3 November 2020 had mentioned the lack of legal authority and that this was a mistake. However, she did not want to blame anyone because, in her view, mistakes would be made during crisis management. In the Ministry of the Environment and Food's statement with respect to the lack of legal authority, the date when Jensen knew of the lack of legal authority was given as 7 November 2020. During the hearings, a number of documents were presented in which the date of this knowledge was said to be 5 or 6 November 2020, and in a submitted text message correspondence from the period, Jensen himself believed the date to be 5 November 2020. Regarding the process surrounding the preparation of the Ministry of the Environment and Food's report, a number of documents with information about this had been classified by the government with reference to "the consideration of securing the government's internal and political decision-making process". During the hearings, a department councilor in the Ministry of State explained that on 7 November he had received an email from an office manager in his ministry that urgent legislation ('''') was needed to secure the legal basis for mink culling, but that he did not inform Bertelsen about this. It was also stated that on the morning of 7 November the Prime Minister had asked Health Minister Magnus Heunicke to call a new press conference, which took place that afternoon. At the press conference, Heunicke said that the cullings should "go quickly" and "be over by 16 November".
Deleted text messages In connection with the questioning of a number of officials, several text messages were presented, in which Bertelsen indicated that the matter could be "life-threatening" for the government and called for the Ministry of Food and the
Ministry of Health to take responsibility. On 1 November 2021 it was revealed that Frederiksen and a number of advisers in the Ministry of the State had text messages automatically deleted after 30 days, and that a number of text messages exchanged during the mink process had therefore not been handed over to the Mink Commission, although this had already requested it on 29 April 2021. At a press conference on 3 November 2021, Frederiksen stated that the deletion began at the latest during the summer of 2020 on the advice of Bertelsen, which the latter affirmed during a hearing on 18 November 2021. The phrase "Live with it" ('''') became famous as an example of the Prime Minister's blunt style. Frederiksen later described the wording as a mistake during the election campaign for the
2022 general election and repeated that it was intended as an attempt to defend the people who were in the middle of crisis management. Police authorities subsequently attempted to recover the text messages and announced to the public on 12 November that they had finished trying to recover them, but not the result. On the same day, the government received the results of the police's attempt in sealed envelopes. Monday 15 November at 9, a meeting was held between the Mink Commission, the Ministry of Justice, Frederiksen and the three top officials in the Ministry of State, who had switched on the automatic deletion of text messages after 30 days. On Wednesday 17 November, Frederiksen published the result of the police investigation, which was that it had not been possible to recreate the deleted text messages. The Prime Minister was criticised for delaying the announcement of the result until Wednesday, the day after the
municipal and regional elections of 2021, when she had the option to announce it immediately after the meeting on Monday at 9. This among others by
Jakob Ellemann (
V), who called it "convenient". When asked why she waited to announce the result until Wednesday, the prime minister replied, "It's because I've been occupied with some other things, it almost goes without saying".
Report (beretning) The commission submitted its report on 30 June 2022, in which it appeared that the decision to cull all Danish mink was without legal authority. The commission concluded about the prime minister's role: The commission also concluded that Frederiksen must have been aware that the KU meeting was organised and material prepared in a forced process. Moreover, her announcements at the press conference on 4 November, where she ordered all mink dead, were "grossly misleading and clearly illegal". Regarding the Ministry of State as a whole it "assumed an overarching and governing role in the forced process". Here the commission assessed, "Overall, it is the commission's assessment that the Ministry of State has acted in a very objectionable manner in the process, which led to the gross misleading of mink breeders and the public and the clearly illegal instructions to the authorities in connection with the press conference on 4 November 2020". Furthermore, the Ministry of Food and Agriculture had acted "particularly objectionable". Frederiksen declared during the 2022 election campaign that she disagreed that it had been a forced process. Unequivocally, the Mink Commission rejected the then-Minister of Food's explanation that he only became aware of the lack of legal authority on 7 November at 06:31 PM. The commission wrote, "Mogens Jensen received information earlier, namely on 5 November 2020. The commission thus finds that Mogens Jensen, at least during the consultation on 11 November 2020, delivered incorrect information". Jensen had thus spoken untruthfully to the Folketing and the public, as he had said at a consultation on 11 November that he was only made aware of the lack of authorisation "at the weekend" (the period from 6 to 8 November 2020.) At the same time, the commission found that 10 officials had committed "official misconduct of such severity that there was a basis for the public authorities to seek to hold them accountable". == Consequences of the Mink Commission's report ==