Oman Daily Observer

Dutch PM cheers EU leaders by seeing off far-right’s Wilders

SENSE OF RELIEF: Rutte emerged the clear victor, albeit with fewer seats than before

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AMSTERDAM: EU leaders lined up on Thursday to congratula­te Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte on beating far-rightist Geert Wilders in the first of a series of European elections this year in which populist insurgent parties are hoping to rock the establishm­ent.

The centre-right prime minister had trailed in opinion polls for much of the campaign but emerged the clear victor of Wednesday’s election, albeit with fewer seats than before.

Wilders, who campaigned on an anti-immigratio­n platform, won a third more seats than at the last election but was thwarted in his bid to become the biggest party.

Rutte, whose win helped boost the euro and European shares, called it an “evening in which the Netherland­s, after Brexit, after the American elections, said ‘stop’ to the wrong kind of populism.”

A win for Wilders would have been seen as a boost for French farright leader Marine Le Pen, running second in opinion polls before a presidenti­al election in April and May, and for populist parties elsewhere that want to curb immigratio­n and weaken or break up the European Union.

The sense of relief among European leaders was palpable.

“The Netherland­s are our partners, friends, neighbours. Therefore I was very happy that a high turnout led to a very pro-European result, a clear signal,” said German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who will run for re-election in September.

French presidenti­al candidate Emmanuel Macron, expected to face Le Pen in a two-way run-off on May 7, said: “The Netherland­s is showing us that a breakthrou­gh for the extreme right is not a foregone conclusion and that progressiv­es are gaining momentum.”

The risk premium demanded by investors to hold French government bonds rather than safe-haven German bunds sank in early trade to its lowest level in two weeks, although it later widened again as France released new supply into the market via a debt auction.

With 99 per cent of votes counted, Rutte’s VVD Party had won 33 of parliament’s 150 seats, down from 41 at the last vote in 2012. Wilders was second with 20, and the CDA and centrist Democrats 66 tied for third with 19 each, data provided by the ANP news agency showed. Rutte is now virtually guaranteed a third term, leading a government that can be expected to continue tightening immigratio­n policy in the Netherland­s, already among the strictest in the EU.

A number of parties including the VVD and the third-placed Christian Democrats (CDA), have already adopted most of Wilders’ anti-immigratio­n platform, if not his fiery antiIslam rhetoric.

 ?? — AFP ?? Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte (L) holds a gavel next to parliament­ary leader of the People’s Party for Freedom and Democracy Halbe Zijlstra as they speak to the press a day after parliament­ary elections in The Hague on Thursday.
— AFP Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte (L) holds a gavel next to parliament­ary leader of the People’s Party for Freedom and Democracy Halbe Zijlstra as they speak to the press a day after parliament­ary elections in The Hague on Thursday.
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