Patrice Riemens on Tue, 18 Sep 2012 07:26:23 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-nl] Leon de Winter: There's No Business Like Dutch Politics (Wall Street Journal) |
Na de rubriek 'hoe de buitenlandse media wijs proberen te worden uit de Nederlandse verkiezingen' is het wellicht leuk om te zien hoe den Hollandschen mediaman eea aan de internationale readership probeert uit te leggen. Dat deze perilleuse exercitie niet zonder onvermijdelijke uitglijders en versimpelingen gepaard gaat neme men maar daarbij voor lief. --------- origineel: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390443524904577649440085772180.html [OPINION EUROPE, September 13, 2012] There's No Business Like Dutch Politics Don't be fooled by Wednesday's vote. The real vaudeville acts are preparing backstage for the next show. By LEON DE WINTER On Wednesday the Netherlands, one of the oldest democratic nations in the world, went to vote for a new parliament. And the international media completely misunderstood the results. Dutch politics looks like the acts in a vaudeville show. There are classic acts, daring acts, boring acts, stupid acts. There are many, many acts. After Wednesday's vote, the Dutch Parliament houses 11 parties. Many more tried to gain access but failed. There are two parties with only two seats in a 150-seat parliament. The biggest group, the Party for Freedom and Democracy or VVD?more or less comparable to British Conservatives?has 41 seats. A single party can never form a government in the Netherlands. Coalitions are the Dutch way. The Netherlands is a nation of minorities. Since its glorious war of liberation against the tyranny of the Spanish king in the 16th century?a war that was essentially a war for religious freedom?the Netherlands has been a federation of provinces. Every province had its own characteristics, defined by ethnicity and religion. Dutch tolerance was a direct result of this. The farmers and fishermen had to cooperate, despite all their differences, in their fight against the sea. Their land was the inhabitable delta of the Rhine River and the Maas River. They had to build dikes together in order not to drown. For centuries, various religious-political organizations formed the basic fabric of Dutch society, but since the 1960s a process of widespread secularization took hold. This caused the power base of the traditional religious parties to slowly diminish. In Wednesday's vote, the once enormously influential Christian Democratic Appeal, a coalition of Christian parties that used to be an essential member of any coalition, shrank to only 13 seats. That's two less than the Freedom Party of Geert Wilders, the provocateur and populist, a man with a strong distaste for Islam in Europe. Mr. Wilders is an excellent debater and one of the more colorful acts in the vaudeville theatre of Dutch politics. The Dutch went to the polls again after only two years because last April, Mr. Wilders withdrew his support from the VVD coalition, which Mr. Wilders's party had supported without having a cabinet member. Mr. Wilders said the new budget would hurt pensioners. He gambled that the European economic crisis would strengthen his appeal, but he lost big time: His Freedom Party lost nine of its 24 seats on Wednesday. Surprisingly, two traditional parties gained. The VVD scored 41 seats and the PvdA, the Dutch Labor Party, took 38 seats. According to the international media, these two parties are pro-Europe parties, and the results are supposed to show the strong appeal of the EU to the Dutch. This is not true. The Dutch, in general, are highly critical of the way the European Union developed into a currency community. In 2005, the Dutch had a referendum for the first time in 200 years. At stake was a proposal by the main political parties to accept a European constitution. A majority?61.5%?voted against it, causing the European political establishment to rename the constitution a "treaty." The Dutch Parliament ratified this in 2008 without putting it to a referendum. The two most outspoken critics of the way that European political elites are handling the financial and economic crises are Mr. Wilders's Freedom Party and the Socialist Party. The Dutch Socialist Party is quite a phenomenon. Founded by Maoists in the 1970s, it is still populated by admirers of revolutionaries such as Hugo Chavez and Evo Morales, and supporters of Hamas (oh, vaudeville!). Before this week's elections, the pollsters predicted a huge win for the Socialists and a steady hold?or even some gains?for the Freedom Party. They are both populist parties, each one functioning at opposing ends of the political spectrum. In the end they both lost support, but early analyses show that at least a quarter of the electorate voted strategically. Mr. Wilders's supporters voted for the VVD because they feared the gathering strength of the Socialists and Labor. The same thing happened on the left: In order to prevent another coalition controlled by the VVD, Socialist supporters and supporters of another leftist party, the Green-Left, voted for the main leftist party, which still is Labor. So in reality there has been no change in attitude about the EU. There has been no strengthening of the political center. There is only the illusion that there was, and international observers have been blinded by it. The Netherlands is prosperous. Unemployment is relatively low, and the Dutch economy is among the strongest in the world. The welfare state still functions, although it is expensive and every year the state has to borrow billons to maintain its social programs. In general, the population of the Netherlands is well-educated, works hard, and is disciplined and pragmatic. Still, at the moment, many feel insecure and threatened by Brussels and the Greek situation. The fans of Mr. Wilders and the former Maoists did not give up their preferences. Instead, they realized that for the moment it is better to hold their fire. In Holland, there is no real vaudeville theater anymore. Instead, we have our parliament in the Hague. It now has two main traditional acts: the VVD and Labor. But don't be fooled. The really funny, biting, crazy acts are preparing backstage for the next show. ................. Mr. de Winter is a novelist and political commentator for the Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf and the German newspaper Die Welt. ______________________________________________________ * Verspreid via nettime-nl. Commercieel gebruik niet * toegestaan zonder toestemming. <nettime-nl> is een * open en ongemodereerde mailinglist over net-kritiek. * Meer info, archief & anderstalige edities: * http://www.nettime.org/. * Contact: Menno Grootveld (rabotnik@xs4all.nl).