Dutch voters head to knife-edge elections to focus on homes and WEDERSERS
The Hague, Netherlands (AP) – Dutch voters went to the polls Wednesday on a familiar knife’s edge after a campaign focused on anti-libertarianism that has multiplied over the past two years.
The vote is against the backdrop of deep destruction in this nation of 18 million and violence in the recent migration conference in the Hague and protests in new countries that have sought institutions.
Polls suggest that Belder’s group, which wants a complete suspension of asylum seekers entering the Netherlands, but other moderate groups warn of a gap and polyters who are careful that many people wait until the last minute to decide who they will vote for.
Voting opens at 7:30 in the morning and close to 9 PM broadcasters publish the vote as soon as the voting ends and renews for an hour.
Voters can cast their votes in places ranging from town halls to schools, but also historic churches, churches, the zoo, which was in the Arshem prison and the Iconic Anne Frank House House in Amsterdam.
After the results are known, the parties must discuss the makeup of the next Government of unity in this country, a system that is compatible with all but ensures that no one could rule alone.
The mainstream parties have decided to work with the suspects, arguing that his decision to clean up the four-party coalition earlier this year in the debate over the crackdown banned by the Coalition’s untrustworthy partner.
Rob Jetten, leader of the high-profile D66 group which has risen to the polls as the campaign wears on, said in the final debate of the election
And he told the audience that voters “can choose again tomorrow to listen to your raging hatred for another 20 years, or they can choose, with good energy, to just work and solve it.”
The Timmermans of Frans, who was once the Deputy of the European Commission Mommission who now leads the left bloc of the Labor Party and the Greens, and that day tomorrow – and that day tomorrow – and that day can find the end of women. “
WELVERS rejected arguments that he failed to deliver his 2023 campaign despite being the largest member of Parliament, accusing other parties of mocking his plans.
“If I were the prime minister – which I got as the leader of the main party – then we would have released that agenda,” he said.
Children stayed away from the Minister during the negotiations after the last election because he did not have the support of potential allies.
The election could see the reformist party, the new social contract, which had won 20 seats in the last election and joined the outgoing coalition, all but removed from the Dutch political map, which deviated from all or almost all of its seats. The decline in popularity is a visible backlash against the party’s decision to join the coalition and the departure of its popular leader, Pieter Omtzigt, who retired from political life in April.



