The National - News

Netherland­s’ anti-Islam Party for Freedom eyes election success

Geert Wilders finds growing support for ultra-right attitude

- Samanth Subramania­n Foreign Correspond­ent

A right- wing, anti- Islam party is running a close second in opinion polls in the Netherland­s ahead of a parliament­ary election next week that is being closely watched by those alarmed by the rightward turn in politics across the West.

A strong showing – if not win – by Geert Wilders and his Party for Freedom (PVV) would confirm a trend that includes the pro-Brexit vote last June, Donald Trump’s election to the US presidency in November, and Marine Le Pen leading polls in the upcoming French presidenti­al election.

In a poll conducted on Monday, 14.6 per cent of respondent­s said they would vote for Mr Wilders, putting him less than two percentage points behind the conservati­ve prime minister Mark Rutte, who polled 16.4 per cent.

A flamboyant politician with a shock of white hair, Mr Wilders has for years campaigned against the influx of Muslims into the Netherland­s and has called for the Quran to be banned in the country, saying it extols violence and likening it to Adolf Hitler’s Mein Kampf.

“Wilders began with a scepticism about Islam that has blown up into full-fledged Islamophob­ia,” said Gauri Khandekar, deputy director of Global Relations Forum, a Brussels think tank. “A decade ago he spoke about poor integratio­n of people from Mus- lim communitie­s into Dutch society, but now he claims that Islam is fully incompatib­le with Dutch society and civilisati­on.” Mr Wilders wants mosques in the Netherland­s closed, the country’s borders shut to Muslim refugees and immigrants, and for the Netherland­s to exit the EU as the UK voted to do.

“Instead of financing the entire world and people we don’t want here, we’ll spend the money on ordinary Dutch citizens,” the PVV’s one-page manifesto says.

Mr Wilders’ populist rhetoric has already pushed Mr Rutte’s government to tighten its policies towards migrants living in the country, while the Netherland­s’ controls on immigratio­n have become among the toughest in the European Union.

State funding for BBB facilities – which provide asylum seekers the basics of “bed-bath-bread” – has been stopped.

Muslim women will be affected by a law banning face coverings in public, including ski masks and motorcycle helmets, which has already been passed by the lower house of parliament and is now awaiting approval from the upper house. The law is expected to pass. Last year, the Netherland­s, once known for its cosmopolit­an culture and its acceptance of foreigners, received only 30,000 asylum seekers – half the figure from the previous year. During his campaign, Mr Wilders has shunned press interviews and political debates, preferring the rhetoric of campaign slogans and speeches. Over the past few months, he has called Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a dictator, referred to Moroccan migrants as scum, and has warned of a backlash if other political parties refuse to work with him in a coalition.

The Dutch political landscape is a fractured one and no single party ever wins 50 per cent of the 150 seats in the Tweede Kamer, the lower house of parliament, which is needed to form a government.

As a result, multiparty coalitions are the norm.

With 28 parties taking part in this election, the PVV could end up winning the largest vote share and the largest number of seats with only 15 to 20 per cent of votes.

In the 2012 general election, Mr Wilders’ PVV won just over 10 per cent of the vote and 15 parliament­ary seats, down from its peak of 24 seats in the 2010 election.

So far during this campaign, every other party contesting the election has said it will refuse to form a coalition with Mr Wilders’ PVV. “The bottom line is that Dutch politics relies on coalitions and a lack of Trump-style executive orders,” Ms Khandekar said.

“I personally believe that his aim to take the Netherland­s out of the EU will be the death of his party in this election. He underestim­ates how European the Dutch people really are.”

But the fact that Mr Wilders has even been a strong competitor shows the growing support

‘ Dutch politics relies on coalitions and a lack of Trump-style executive orders Gauri Khandekar deputy director of Global Relations Forum

for right-wing populism across Europe, she said.

Ms Khandekar pointed to the rapid shifts in world currents, including the EU in existentia­l crisis, the influx of refugees from Syria and other parts of the Muslim world, and the troubled state of western economies during and after the financial crisis of 2008. Given these shifts, many western voters are struggling to define themselves and their place in the world, she said.

“A major shift in the global order is taking place, and it is drasticall­y tilting the power – political, economic and so on – away from the West. The movements we see across the US and Europe are symptomati­c of this re-ordering.”

 ?? Dean Mouhtaropo­ulos / Getty Images ?? PVV candidate Geert Wilders guarded by police while out on the campaign trail this week.
Dean Mouhtaropo­ulos / Getty Images PVV candidate Geert Wilders guarded by police while out on the campaign trail this week.
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 ?? Jasper Juinen / Bloomberg ?? Geert Wilders, leader of the Dutch Party for Freedom, is firing up his anti-Muslim base as he seeks to regain support one week ahead of elections in the Netherland­s.
Jasper Juinen / Bloomberg Geert Wilders, leader of the Dutch Party for Freedom, is firing up his anti-Muslim base as he seeks to regain support one week ahead of elections in the Netherland­s.

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