The Dutch go to the polls again in a snap election triggered by the Anti-Immigration Law lawmaker
The Hague, Netherlands (AP) – Less than two years after anti-Islam firebrand Geert Welders led his team to victory over the Dutch, the Netherlands is on the way again.
The Lawmaker, who lived under the protection of the watch for more than 20 years due to the threat of death, woke up in Wednesday’s election with Juving who is dragging his serious plans in the controversy with his far-reaching plans to break his administration.
Finding immigration also dominated the campaign before the vote in all 150 seats in the Parliament of the Parliament of representatives, as the parties that usually stay on the middle line of politics have been raised to the right of the popularity of the fiery rhetoric of the church.
But even if the WELVERS win again – and the Pols suggest it will be a knife-edge result – he will struggle to build more unity as the major parties have decided to join him, even before election day.
The leader of the centrist Christian Democrats, Henri Bontenbal, said that the group of attackers and the platform of the democratic right “do not defend democracy these days.”
The outgoing government led by Dick Schoof, who was elected without the skills of Aturner and appointed by the wife to be prime minister, went down in history as one of the shortest in modern Dutch history and was notoriously corrupt among its members.
WELVERS, whose party won 37 seats in the last election in late 2023, argues that he was left out of government because other coalitions stepped in to support his anti-immigrant agenda.
Big problems
Many groups want to cut the number of migrants arriving in this often overcrowded nation of 18 million people. Other major issues deal with the lack of affordable housing and reimbursement for health care costs. Issues that have taken a back seat include the climate crisis and spending on defense as Europe consolidates its military readiness to deal with Russian aggression.
Places, sometimes called the Dutch Donald Trump, focused his election campaign on a 10-point plan to force a complete freeze on asylum seekers, including transferring people through borders with Bergium and Germany.
“The Netherlands has become a one-stop-shop for pensions,” he said during a televised debate in which he was repeatedly criticized by his political opponents for putting in what they called a last-ditch government.
The Netherlands is not alone in turning to the right
The Dutch anger is reaching the right shift around the world, said Léonie de Jonge, professor of research on the longest crack at the University of Tübingen in Germany.
“We are certainly seeing a strong rise in the economy of the far right. It is a global phenomenon, and the Netherlands is not immune to that,” said Jonge in a telephone interview.
Anti-tont protests have turned violent, including demonstrations against asylum seekers and recent protests in The Hague where a police car and the head of a political party were set on fire.
Last month, the Dutch King Willem-Alem-Alem-Alem -Ander, in a speech written by the outgoing government, called for a return to the Dutch tradition of reversing the polarization issued under the tenth decade.
The revival of the Christian Democrats
The Christian Democrats were not part of the final coalition after receiving its vote in 2023. But the party has now voted under Bontenbal’s sustainability adviser, who is campaigning on a pledge to restore political respectability.
“What we have seen is two years of politics of division and chaos. What we want … to present is a politics of hope and responsibility,” Bontenbal Press said during the campaign at his home in Rotterdam.
Bontlobal is one of several leaders of mainstream parties who have expelled Wilders’ party from the federal government.
Amsterdam Professor of Amsterdam Sy
If a small coalition fails, “according to marriage, the largest party loses the right to form a coalition and goes to the party that is ranked second.” But, De Vreese added, “The process is based more on meetings and history than a ready-made plan.”
The former Vice President of the European Commission leads the rest of the institution
Another strong content is the far-left green bloc and the labor group led by former European climate chief Frans Timmerman. He wants to appear in what he does as the stasis of Schoof management.
“The problem with this country is that in the last few years nothing has happened,” he told the AP. “No problem is solved, every problem just got worse. So what we need to do is … Get this country working again and put this country back into society.”
Timmermans’ Party is campaigning on the platform of building 100,000 new homes a year to reduce the chronic shortage of affordable housing.
The election will lead to long talks on unity
While the outcome of the election is anything to go by, one thing is for sure the coalition Government, and maybe months of negotiations brought together enough parties to form a majority in the house of representatives.
Voter Herman de Jong, visits a market in Rotterdam while the bontonbal is campaigning for political fatigue.
“We need strength, calmness, unity, something like that,” he said. “I think that constant conflict between organizations is not good for people.”



