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Dutch vote may herald important shift to left

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  • Dutch vote may herald important shift to left

    The International Herald Tribune
    November 23, 2006 Thursday

    Dutch vote may herald important shift to left;
    Christian Democrats lead, but polls showa 'move to fringes'

    AMSTERDAM


    The Dutch are likely to keep their sitting, conservative prime
    minister, Jan Peter Balkenende, following general elections
    Wednesday, but early exit polls suggested that any new government
    might have to make an important shift to the left.

    With only a small portion of the ballots counted, the prime
    minister's Christian Democratic Party retained the largest number of
    votes but fell far short of forming a government. Given the new
    fractures on the right, the prime minister may have to work with two
    leftist parties: the moderate Labor Party, which came in second, and
    the new far-left Socialist Party.

    In this case, the conservative prime minister would have to make
    deals with political leaders with whom ideological relations have
    been uneasy at best. The result may be more lenient policies toward
    immigrants and asylum seekers, and less, rather than more, of the
    recent social welfare reform.

    Wouter Bos, the Labor leader, is a familiar face on the Dutch scene.
    But the big surprise of the day was likely to fall to Jan
    Marijnissen, a plainspeaking advocate for the underdog.

    Dubbed the wizard of Oss, after his hometown, the former welder has
    been called the political phenomenon of the year.

    Once a Maoist, he took his party from its inflexible communist roots
    and adapted it to become a working-class movement that got wide
    backing from young people off all stripes as well as artists and
    intellectuals.

    Early results projected that the party could make a leap from its 9
    seats to end up with 25 seats in the 150-member Parliament.

    Marijnissen said he favored a general amnesty for all the failed
    asylum seekers who may face deportation from the Netherlands.

    Exit polls Wednesday night showed that the far-left Socialists
    increased their vote to overtake the liberal VVD, Balkenende's
    coalition partner, making his job of forming a strong government much
    more difficult.

    ''These are very disappointing results,'' said Defense Minister Henk
    Kamp, a member of the VVD.

    He declined to comment on whether his party would be able to continue
    in government.

    ''We'll see who the CDA chooses. The initiative lies with others.''

    Who joins the next coalition will determine how closely Balkenende
    sticks to his business-friendly policies and tough line on
    immigration, long a major concern of Dutch voters.

    The other big winner, according to the exit polls, was the new party
    of an anti-immigration maverick, Geert Wilders, who says the
    Netherlands risks being flooded by Muslims and wants an immediate
    halt to new migrants.

    ''What we see is a move to the fringes,'' said a former CDA minister,
    Piet Hein Donner. ''Whoever puts together the coalition will have a
    very hard time transforming that into a good government agenda.''

    The one coalition that looked most likely to have the 76 seats needed
    for a majority was an uneasy partnership between the CDA and their
    Labor rivals, likely to produce discord over tax, pensions and
    immigration policy.

    ''My fear is that the CDA and Labor will form a coalition on the
    basis of the present polls and that would mean a very unstable
    government,'' said Jan Kleinnijenhuis, a political science professor
    at Amsterdam's Free University.

    Balkenende, 50, took credit for a strong economic recovery in the
    last year that he said was supported by unpopular welfare reforms
    that he pushed through early in his term. He has vowed to continue
    his pro-business policy line.

    ''We have strengthened the economy,'' he said Tuesday during a
    televised debate with the leaders of the biggest parties.

    ''It has been a really hard fight for us, but we've come out
    better.''

    Charles Kalshoven, a senior economist at ABN Amro Holding NV in
    Amsterdam, agreed: ''In the first years of his cabinet, Balkenende
    made all the painful reforms. The economy is doing a lot better this
    year. Consumer confidence is really very strong and if consumer
    confidence is up, so are the ruling parties in the polls.''

    Bos, the Labor leader, accused Balkenende of pandering to big
    business and the wealthy while failing to fight inequality. He has
    pledged to slow corporate tax cuts and increase spending on childcare
    and job-creation programs. Labor has also promised an amnesty for
    some immigrants who have waited years for asylum.

    Balkenende has implemented tough immigration and integration laws
    since the killing of Theo van Gogh, a Islam critic and filmmaker, by
    an Islamist militant in 2004 and the murder of Pim Fortuyn, a popular
    anti-immigration politician, in 2002.

    His government has also said it will ban the wearing of burkas and
    other Muslim face veils in public.

    The election, originally scheduled for May 2007, was called after the
    center-right coalition collapsed in June in a row over the
    government's handling of the disputed citizenship of Ayaan Hirsi Ali,
    a Somali-born Dutch politician and Islam critic.

    Back then, Labor had a strong lead in the opinion polls, but that
    evaporated as the economy rebounded and as Balkenende went on the
    offensive, portraying the telegenic Bos, a former manager for Shell,
    as slick and superficial.

    Labor had hoped for strong backing from the almost 10 percent of the
    electorate of immigrant origin, although Turkish voters were angered
    after it dropped an election candidate for not accepting Ottoman
    Turkey's killing of Armenians as genocide.

    ''The economy has clearly been the ruling coalition's focus,'' said
    Joop van Holsteyn, a professor of political science at Leiden
    University. ''Balkenende's campaign was all about continuing on this
    path.''

    Immigration, the issue that has dominated Dutch politics in recent
    years, played a less important role in the campaign than the economy,
    despite the government's backing the proposal last week to ban
    face-covering clothing.
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