Geert Wilders is betting that triggering the collapse of an unloved Dutch government would position him to emerge stronger and become the nation’s dominant political figure, but signs are emerging that the far-right leader’s gambit could backfire.
By alienating potential coalition partners and testing the patience of weary voters, Wilders is losing support compared to the last election and his Party for Freedom’s (PVV) lead over the GreenLeft-Labor alliance has narrowed.
While Wilders still has months to campaign ahead of the Oct. 29 election and is skillful at commanding the spotlight in the Netherlands’ fragmented political landscape, his core topic of migration is now contending with new challenges sparked by frayed transatlantic relations under US President Donald Trump — an ally of the far-right leader.
Photo: EPA-EFE
That makes the pending Dutch snap election an important test of how deep anti-immigration populism runs as Europe seeks to rally together to contend with trade disputes with the US and military threats from Russia.
“Given the geopolitical context — the Trump agenda — it could add up that voters becoming fed up with unpredictable nationalists,” said Stefan Couperus, an associate professor of political science at Groningen University. “This could take away some of Wilders’ constituency.”
The far-right firebrand risks a repeat of 2012, when the PVV refused to support austerity measures leading to the collapse of then-Dutch prime minister Mark Rutte’s first government. The ploy failed and his party lost seats in the subsequent election.
Even without Rutte in the way to forge a consensus, the same thing could happen this time. Although Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof’s administration was ineffective, Wilders led the biggest ruling party and would struggle to avoid blame for its failure to get much done.
“Arguing, disagreement, stagnation is what the cabinet has offered this country,” said Frans Timmermans, the former European commissioner who heads the GreenLeft-Labor alliance, speaking in parliament this week. “When it comes to taking responsibility and making difficult decisions, Wilders does not deliver.”
Disappointment is particularly pronounced among people who voted for the PVV in the previous election. Their approval of the government’s performance more than halved to just 13 percent, according to the survey of more than 16,000 people by TV news program EenVandaag. In the Netherlands’ fickle political landscape, that means these voters could switch allegiance or give in to apathy.
As in previous ballots, it is expected that more than a dozen parties would be vying for parliamentary seats. Those conditions stem from the lack of minimum thresholds and have forced Dutch politicians into coalitions, which typically take months to form.
Rutte — the longest serving premier in Dutch history — was adept at forging deals across party lines, but after his four-party alliance collapsed in 2023 over an immigration dispute, he left national politics. That weakened his center-right People’s Party (VVD) and opened a power vacuum that Wilders is trying to fill.
Despite the PVV being the biggest after the November 2023 election, Wilders was forced to give up the premier post because prospective partners balked. Schoof, a nonpartisan civil servant, was given the job, leaving the setup less stable.
“Next time, I’ll really become prime minister myself,” Wilders wrote on social media last month.
Although positions can quickly change when power is at stake, his list of potential partners could be limited after he pulled the PVV out of the ruling coalition over a migration dispute.
Henri Bontenbal, head of the Christian Democratic Appeal party — which has posted the biggest gains in the polls — rejected collaborating, saying that “Wilders’ party does not care about democracy.”
The center-right New Social Contract party also said no, although its support collapsed after founder Pieter Omtzigt quit politics.
“He has managed to accomplish nothing,” said Rob Jetten, leader of the progressive Democrats 66 party in parliament.
“You have shown yourself to be a very cowardly leader,” he said to Wilders during a parliamentary debate.
Dilan Yesilgoz-Zegerius, the new head of the VVD, bucked the trend and left the door open, saying she needs to “make up her mind.”
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