An opening for the controversial Geert Wilders?


by Sunder Katwala    
February 21, 2010 at 9:58 am

[Article was wrongly attributed initially. The correct author now listed.]

The Dutch government collapsed early on Saturday morning, with the Dutch Labour party leaving the coalition over a disagreement with Christian Democrat Prime Minister Balkenende’s proposal to extend the country’s military commitment in Afghanistan, beyond the coalition’s earlier agreement to withdraw by the summer with all Dutch troops leaving Afghanistan by the end of the year.

The 16 hour long Cabinet meeting had led Labour leader and deputy PM Wouter Bos had pulled out of Friday’s progressive governance conference in London, at which British PM Gordon Brown was joined by centre-left premiers and party leaders from around Europe.

Labour’s withdrawal from the Cabinet leave the government without a majority coalition, and will lead to new elections within three months. The parties face local elections on March 3rd. Dutch public opinion backs the Labour stance on withdrawal, though is equally divided over whether the issue ought to end the government.

The Netherlands has had the most volatile politics in western Europe in the last decade.

Geert Wilders’ populist anti-immigration Freedom Party (PVV) hopes to make significant gains, having won 9 seats as the fifth largest party in the last elections in 2006.

Wilder’s PVV finished second in the European elections, ahead of Labour, and Reuters reports that the most recent national opinion polls now have the PVV in second place.

A Feb. 14 Maurice de Hond poll put the [Christian Democrat] CDA on 27 seats, followed by the anti-immigrant Freedom Party (PVV) on 25 seats and the centre-right Liberal Party VVD on 22 seats. A Feb. 18 Politieke Barometer poll put the CDA on 32 seats, the PVV on 24 and Labour third with 21.

There are likely to be major political developments ahead of the campaign.

It has been widely anticipated in the Netherlands that Balkenende to be replaced by the Christian Democrats as party leader before the election, with Foreign Minister Maxime Verhagen likely to take over.

That change may well prompt a change in the Labour Party leadership too, with Wouter Bos having twice led the party into elections against Balkenende.

Bos’ modernising campaign achieved a significant Labour recovery in the 2003 elections, reversing much of the damage of the heavy defeat in 2002 in a campaign which saw the rise and assassination of the populist Pym Fortuyn. But Bos’ Labour Party then had a disappointing result in 2006, as it lost seats and failed to emerge as the largest party. It is much less clear who the next Labour leader might be, with an open field of several potential candidates if there was to be a leadership change.

One outcome of the political crisis will be to make any future Christian Democrat-Labour alliance a very unlikely outcome.

The Christian Democrats have not ruled out forming a coalition including Gert Wilders, and nor has one other centre-right party, the economically liberal VVD, of which Wilders was a member until 2004.

However, the third party in the outgoing coalition, the moderate conservative Christian Union has done so, joining the social democratic, liberal, socialist and green parties in forming a “cordon sanitaire” in which the parties have said they have “unbridgeable differences” which mean that they could not join a government with the Freedom Party.

—————
cross-posted from Next Left


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About the author
Sunder Katwala is a regular contributor to Liberal Conspiracy. He is secretary-general of the Fabian Society. Also at: Next Left
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Reader comments


Ah the joys of PR no wonder you love it so

2. Sunder Katwala

Hi Sunny

Thanks for using this. Can you pls attribute it to me & next left

3. Golden Gordon

Interestingly if a political party that was anti immigration and neo liberal economically in philosophy set up in this country, it would get so much support from bloggers in this country. It’s the dream team philosophy.
Personally it would make my stomach churn but it would give the HPs’ and the many neo economics liberals on this site a cause and also they would not be bogged down by tag conservative or christian democrat .
But who could be the British Geert ?
Answers on a postcard. I’ve got a name but it’s too obvious

4. Just Visiting

who would _want_ to be the British Wilders…. 24/7 police protection…. it’s a miserable choice that few would make.

Dan Hannan?
Douglas Murray?

6. Just Visiting

Sunder – you describe Wilders as controversial – which is a tag often thrown around rather loosely, of all sorts of people.

But I guess that the decision by whoever in the USA powers_that_be that allowed the Fort Hood killer to stay on, will also be criticised as controversial:

Boston Globe:
WASHINGTON – Army superiors were warned about the radicalization of Major Nidal Malik Hasan years before he allegedly massacred 13 soldiers at Fort Hood, Texas, but did not act in part because they valued the rare diversity of having a Muslim psychiatrist, military investigators wrote in previously undisclosed reports.

7. Golden Gordon

No
I was thinking of Nick Cohen or Anthony Browne


Reactions: Twitter, blogs
  1. Liberal Conspiracy

    An opening for the controversial Geert Wilders? http://bit.ly/clEg6l

  2. Naadir Jeewa

    Reading: An opening for the controversial Geert Wilders?: The Dutch government collapsed early on Saturday morning… http://bit.ly/agwyPV

  3. Gerardo Blueson

    An opening for the controversial Geert Wilders? http://bit.ly/clEg6l

  4. The Weekly Wilders Round-Up « Defend Geert Wilders

    [...] Liberal Conspiracy – An opening for the controversial Geert Wilders? [...]





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