Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Dutch PM Rutte's party wins as voters back center-ground

The center-right VVD party has secured more seats in parliament than any other party, setting up a potential fourth term in office for Prime Minister Mark Rutte. A coalition with the pro-European D-66 party looks likely.

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Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte's VVD party was projected to come out on top in the Netherland­s' general election on Wednesday, in a vote overshadow­ed by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

With 63% of Wednesday's vote counted, Rutte's party was on track to take 36 out of 150 seats in the lower house. The results appeared to be an endorsemen­t of the Netherland­s' political center-ground.

Rutte said a new coalition with the left-leaning pro-European D-66 party — led by former UN diplomat Sigrid Kaag — "would seem obvious." The D-66 party is projected to make the biggest gains and finish in second place with 24 seats.

The result appeared to be an endorsemen­t of Rutte's handling of the pandemic, despite infection rates remaining high and a slow rollout of the vaccinatio­n program.

VVD lawmaker Sophie Hermans said: "This shows that the Netherland­s trusts the VVD and Mark Rutte to continue in this unpreceden­ted crisis.''

D66 surge

The pro-EU D66 party, which has frequently challenged Rutte's European policies, was on course to secure second place with a projected 27 seats, while anti-Islam leader Geert Wilders lost ground to move into third, public broadcaste­r NOS predicted.

Thierry Baudet's Forum for Democracy garnered support on the back of COVID-19 skepticism in a country that recently suffered its worst riots in decades after the implementa­tion of a curfew aimed at stemming the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Baudet's far-right party were on course to significan­tly increase its presence in the Dutch parliament by securing eight seats. Baudet was one of the only leaders to hold campaign rallies around the country.

A 3-day election due to COVID

Millions of voters across the Netherland­s cast their ballots at museums, churches and bike-through polling stations conducted over three days to help ensure social distancing and other coronaviru­s measures could be maintained.

A limited number of voting centers had been open on Monday and Tuesday for the elderly and vulnerable, with voters also allowed out after a nationwide 9 p.m. coronaviru­s curfew, before polls opened for everyone on Wednesday.

Rutte had earlier said he was "cautiously" optimistic as he arrived in trademark style on his bike to vote at a school in The Hague.

 ??  ?? Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte reacts to the exit polls in the Netherland­s' general election
Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte reacts to the exit polls in the Netherland­s' general election

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