Major Dutch firms combine to fight ‘populism’
THE HAGUE: Major Dutch corporations includ giant FrieslandCampina have joined forces to showcase national talents in a bid to roll back gloom and populism, the Dutch press reported Saturday.
A PR campaign—whose launch coincides with a tense election campaign—will point to Dutch
Entitled “Global problems, Dutch solutions,” it will look at how Dutch enterprises are enhancing farm yields and water management, coping with demographic ageing, the demands of urbaniZation and the switch to renewable energy.
Zijderveld, told the paper “populism is a symptom of lack of progress.”
“Right now, there is a lack of an outlook for growth and that feeds negativity.”
He added: “To combat populism, we need a new business model, a point on the horizon to which we can work over the next decade.”
“In the election debates, people only talk about today, not about the future,” he said.
The initiative coincides with the run-up to general elections that are seen as a bellwether for nationalism in Europe in a critical year following last year’s Brexit vote and the victory of Donald Trump.
Far-right parties are beating the drum on immigration, Islam and economic stagnation.
Far-right anti-Islam MP Geert Wilders and his Freedom Party (PVV) have been leading the opinion polls for months, leaving Rutte’s Liberal party (VVD) trailing in second place.
A poll aggregate published on February 1 predicted Wilders would emerge with the largest party with 27-31 seats in the 150-member lower house of parliament, with Rutte’s party mustering just 23-27 seats.