- Oct 20, 2022
- 6,948
Good summaryIndeed. And just in the interests of accuracy, Wilders is currently predicted to win 37 seats in a 150-seat house, which is 25% not 35%. So "only" one in four voters picked him. Still shocking enough given the bile he spouts, but he's been knocking around there or thereabouts for two decades, so this was bound to happen eventually.
A lot of the problem here was that people were sick of the government that had ruled for the past 13 years (sound familiar), and all the other major parties were tainted by being involved in the ruling coalition at one time or other. Moreover, the Netherlands currently has a major housing crisis, and - rightly or wrongly - a lot of people seek to blame immigration for exacerbating the situation, rather than looking for a practical and sustainable solution. That current issue was weighing more heavily on most voters' minds than longer-term but important issues like climate change, something you can sort of ignore if you try, but which might actually determine whether any of us are still around in 50 years' time.
A third factor was a live TV debate earlier this week involving all the party leaders. All the others were fumbling around for answers trying their best not to tell the truth whilst not actually lying, and thus they came across as weak-minded. Wilders was direct and gave straight answers. Straight answers that were total made-up lies and bullshit of course, but as we know, as with Johnson, Trump et al, tell people whatever it is you think they want to hear boldly enough, and sufficient numbers of gullible folk will lap it up and vote for you. There were so many undecided people even at that late stage that this one event almost certainly was the clincher.
What happens now is probably down to the VVD in my opinion, and whether Wilders can change their stated minds and get them to work with him. I don't think any of the larger centre and left parties will work with him (certainly not the party I voted for yesterday, GL/PvdA, or D66, almost certainly not NSC*), so without VVD support he cannot form a majority.
Likewise, a centre-left-right coalition would also need VVD support to form a government. Probably whoever does form a government (and I sincerely hope it isn't Wilders), they will need to involve the BBB farmers' party in some way, since the BBB control the upper house, so getting any legislation passed without them will be tricky...
Hopefully the negotiations will be complicated and last the full four-year cycle, then we can vote them back out again without them causing too much damage.
(*that's New Social Contract btw, not North Stand Chat...)