Danish Social Liberal Party
| Danish Social Liberal Party Radikale Venstre | |
|---|---|
| Abbreviation | RV B | 
| Leader | Martin Lidegaard | 
| Chairman | Mikkel Irminger Sarbo | 
| Founded | 21 May 1905 | 
| Split from | Venstre | 
| Headquarters | Christiansborg 1240 København K, Denmark | 
| Newspaper | Radikal Politik | 
| Youth wing | Radikal Ungdom | 
| Membership (2022) | 5,945 | 
| Ideology | Social liberalism Pro-Europeanism | 
| Political position | Centre to centre-left | 
| European affiliation | Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party | 
| European Parliament group | Renew Europe | 
| International affiliation | Liberal International | 
| Nordic affiliation | Centre Group | 
| Colours | |
| Folketing | 7 / 179 (4%) | 
| European Parliament | 1 / 15 (7%) | 
| Regions | 12 / 205 | 
| Municipalities | 93 / 2,432 | 
| Mayors | 1 / 98 | 
| Election symbol | |
| Party flag | |
| Website | |
| radikale.dk | |
The Danish Social Liberal Party (Danish: Radikale Venstre, RV, lit. 'Radical Left') is a social-liberal political party in Denmark. The party was founded as a split from the Venstre Reform Party in 1905.
Historically, the centrist party has played a central role in Danish politics and has supported governments on both sides of the political spectrum, as co-operation is a primary belief of the party. A pro-European party, it is a member of Liberal International and the ALDE, and has one MEP in the Renew Europe group in the European Parliament.