The Phnom Penh Post

Populist politician Wilders falls short in Dutch election

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on both sides of the Atlantic.

But the Dutch results, where parties that favour gentler approaches to refugees gained ground overall, suggested that there may be some limits to populist appeal.

Wilders’s platform was so toxic that most other politician­s have sworn not to cooperate with him.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault both rushed early yesterday to offer their congratula­tions to Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, who held onto office even though he lost nearly a fifth of his seats in parliament. Rutte will need at least three other parties to reach a parliament­ary majority, a grinding process that is expected to drag on for weeks or even months.

Dutch voters “after Brexit, after the American elections, said no to the wrong kind of populism”, Rutte said late on Wednesday in a jubilant victory speech to his supporters.

But Wilders also sought to emphasise his gains.

He captured 13 percent of the vote on Wednesday, compared to 10 percent in the previous elections, and boosted his seats by a third.

“Now we are the 2nd largest party. Next time we will be nr. 1!” he wrote on Twitter yesterday. Earlier in the day, immediatel­y after the results started coming in, he declared that a “patriotic spring” had already begun in Europe, and vowed to continue fighting.

The likely compositio­n of the coalition may also boostWilde­rs’s claims that establishm­ent politician­s on both sides of the political spectrum in the Netherland­s are conspiring against ordinary working people.

Rutte will be forced to pull support from a disparate group of parties, not all of which agree on household basics such as taxation and social welfare – key concerns to Wilders’s voters.

Many Wilders voters on Wednesday said that they felt that mainstream politician­s had sold them out – echoing similar complaints during the US presidenti­al campaign.

The perils of coalition building were on clear display yesterday. The centre-left Labour Party – which four years ago was the second-largest party in the Netherland­s, and was the junior partner in the coalition – wiped out. They plummeted to seventh place, a pitiful showing for a party that was historical­ly a bastion for working-class Dutch support.

Now European leaders will shift focus to the upcoming presidenti­al elections in France, where the anti-immigrant, antiEU Marine Le Pen has been running strongly ahead of the first round of voting on April 23.

The muted result fromWilder­s deprives Le Pen of the chance to point to a neighbour and say that an inexorable tide will carry her forward to victory. And opinion polls suggest that she will ultimately lose the presidenti­al race in favour of a more centrist candidate.

 ?? JOHN THYS/AFP ?? Members of campaign group Avaaz, one wearing a mask of the Dutch far-right PVV party leader (left), welcome the victory of the Liberal VVD party in the general election, at the Buitenhof entrance of the Dutch parliament in The Hague yesterday.
JOHN THYS/AFP Members of campaign group Avaaz, one wearing a mask of the Dutch far-right PVV party leader (left), welcome the victory of the Liberal VVD party in the general election, at the Buitenhof entrance of the Dutch parliament in The Hague yesterday.

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