Geert Wilders, leader of the Party for Freedom, talks to his supporters after announcement of the first preliminary results of general elections in The Hague, Netherlands, Wednesday, November 22, 2023. © Peter Dejong, AP
Nov 23,
2023. Posted by Balkan Periscope - Hellas
Far-right
firebrand Geert Wilders faced an uphill struggle Thursday to woo rivals for a
coalition government after a "monster victory" in Dutch elections
that shook the Netherlands and Europe.
His PVV (Freedom Party) won 37 seats in parliament, more than doubling his share from the last election and outstripping opponents, according to near complete results.
A left-wing
bloc trailed far behind on 25 seats, with the centre-right VVD on 24, a
catastrophic result for the party of outgoing Prime Minister Mark Rutte.
Wilders,
60, now has the daunting task of trying to form a working coalition, courting
rivals that categorically ruled out serving in a PVV-led government before the
vote.
The
unexpected landslide win prompted immediate congratulations from fellow
far-right leaders in France and Hungary but will likely
raise fears in Brussels -- Wilders is anti-EU and wants a vote on a
"Nexit" to leave the bloc.
Although he softened his anti-Islam rhetoric during the campaign,
the PVV programme pledges a ban on the Koran, mosques and Islamic headscarves
and Muslim community leaders in the Netherlands were quick to voice
concern.
"I don't know if Muslims are still safe in the Netherlands.
I am worried about this country," Habib el Kaddouri from the SMN
association of Moroccan Dutch, told local agency ANP.
Lizette Keyzer, a 60-year-old business manager from Enschede in the east of
the Netherlands, said she had "heart palpitations" when the exit poll
results came out.
The country "is going in a right-wing direction. We hope that this
does not completely become the case", added Keyzer.
Tsunami
Addressing cheering supporters in The Hague after exit polls, Wilders doubled
down on his anti-immigrant rhetoric, saying the Dutch had voted to stem the
"tsunami" of asylum-seekers.
"The PVV can no longer be ignored," he cried, urging other
parties to do a deal with him.
But it is not clear how he can scrape together the 76 seats he needs for a
majority in the 150-seat parliament.
Former European Commissioner Frans Timmermans, whose Green/Labour bloc came
in second, immediately ruled out cooperation, saying it was now their job to
"defend democracy" in the country.
Anti-corruption champion Pieter Omtzigt, whose New Social Contract party
scored 20 seats, seems certain to play a role and indicated he was
"available" for talks, admitting they wouldn't be easy.
Dilan Yesilgoz, who led the centre-right VVD to a disappointing 24 seats,
was coy on election night, saying Wilders would have to see if he can forge a
coalition.
She first opened the door to Wilders joining a VVD-led government but has stressed she would not serve under him.
Diederick van Wijk from the Clingendael Institute told AFP the Netherlands
was now in "uncharted territory" after the "landslide
victory" of Wilders.
"A Prime Minister Wilders could be within reach," he said.
'Winds of change'
The Dutch lurch to the far-right comes after Italy elected Giorgia
Meloni as prime minister.
Hungary's nationalist Prime Minister Viktor Orban hailed
"winds of change" after the exit poll, while France's Marine Le
Pen cheered his "spectacular performance."
And although Wilders pledged he would be prime minister "for all the
Dutch", his anti-Muslim rants in the past have earned him the sobriquet
"Dutch Trump" -- also a reference to his dyed, slicked-back
hairstyle.
He was found guilty of discrimination in 2016 after leading a crowd
chanting for "fewer" Moroccans in the Netherlands and has previously
likened the Koran to Adolf Hitler's "Mein Kampf", saying both books
should be banned.
With hallmark Wilders rhetoric, the PVV manifesto says:
"Asylum-seekers feast on delightful free cruise-ship buffets while Dutch
families have to cut back on groceries."
"We want less Islam in the Netherlands and we will achieve that
through: less non-Western immigration and the introduction of a general halt to
asylum," says the programme.
A "binding referendum" would be held on a "Nexit" --
the idea of the Netherlands leaving the EU. The PVV also calls for an
"immediate halt" to development aid.
On foreign
policy, the parallels to Trump are clear. "Netherlands first,"
trumpeted the manifesto.
Dutch media
were left agog by the margin of Wilders' victory.
"No
one expected this, not even the winner himself," said the Trouw daily.
Even the usually unexcitable NOS public broadcaster called it a "monster
victory", a phrase that featured in several media.
The
Financieele Dagblad said the result "turns politics in The Hague on its
head" while the NRC daily describes it as a "right-wing populist
revolt that will shake the Binnenhof to its foundations", referring to the
government quarter in The Hague.
(AFP)
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