Dutch government formation talks were thrown in disarray on Tuesday (6 February) as centrist party NSC unexpectedly stepped away, complicating the task for far-right politician Geert Wilders to assemble a working coalition.
NSC, an upstart party, took 20 seats in the 22 November election that was won by Wilders’ nationalist Freedom Party (PVV) and was seen as an essential partner to form a coalition that would have a majority in the Netherlands’ 150-seat lower legislative body.
EU ‘little Trumps’ hail Wilders' victory but government still tough equation
While the victory of Dutch far-right PVV party whets EU nationalists’ appetite seeing a return to “national identities”, the possibility of Geert Wilders leading the country – or even entering government – remains complex.
Wilders, who won a quarter of the vote in the election, has been negotiating with the NSC, the centre-right VVD of outgoing Prime Minister Mark Rutte and the farmers’ protest party BBB since late November, without giving any sign that a deal was close.
In a letter to his fellow party members NSC leader Pieter Omtzigt said he considered the talks to be over, as he said new information on the government’s finances had made it clear the coalition would not be able to keep the promises it intended to make.
“Financial expectations for the coming years have changed,” Omtzigt said. “Under no conditions do we want to make promises we know are empty.”
Wilders said he was “incredibly disappointed” by his prospective partner’s decision. “The country wants this coalition… I don’t understand it at all.”
Ronald Plasterk, a former Labor Party minister and the intermediary leading the talks, had already flagged finances as a key stumbling block, after economic experts had warned the new coalition would have to find around €17 billion in structural spending cuts.
This move complicated already difficult talks even more, as Wilders made it clear this was not part of his agenda, by tweeting his preference for a right-wing government “with lower taxes and without painful, large spending cuts”.
Plasterk is due to inform the Dutch parliament on the state of government formation talks next week.
Omtzigt said in his letter that he would be willing to support a minority government, possibly consisting of the three parties now left at the table.
If no combination of parties can agree to form a coalition, new elections are an option of last resort.
Government formation in the Netherlands traditionally takes a long time. Talks following the previous election in 2021 took a record 299 days.
Read more with Euractiv
France’s Attal: You want ‘Frexit’? Look at Brexit!In today’s edition of the Capitals, find out more about Czech conservatives pushing back against the idea of Orban joining the ECR, the Swedish Nord Stream investigation coming to an end soon, and so much more.
Source: euractiv.com