Last month, a new wave of testimonies about sexual abuse and harassment started when the host Sofie Linde told that she received a sexual invitation from a manager at Danmarks Radio when she was an intern.

Since then, industry after industry - similar to the development in Sweden in the autumn of 2017 - has published calls for sexism.

Most recently from the Danish research world, the political youth unions and the gaming industry.

Researcher Jannie Møller Hartley has studied the metoo movement in both Sweden and Denmark.

- It is a necessary agreement that may have become bigger in Denmark because we waited for three years for it to come here, she says.

Do not want to be correct Swedes

Why then did it take so long before Denmark felt ready?

Jannie Møller Hartley believes that this may be due to the Danes' attitude to Swedish "political correctness".

- You are very afraid that it will affect how we can flirt or socialize, the right to say things in a certain way or how high it may be.

And it has backed up this form of "cozy-sexist" behavior, she says.

Since the new start of testimonies in September, two top politicians have had to leave their posts.

- I do not think that the political revelations are over yet, says Jannie Møller Hartley.