Hague, Oct 30 (UNI) The centrist liberals under Rob Jetten are heading for a dramatic victory, according to the main exit poll, two years after his party languished in fifth place in the last vote.
Jetten staged a remarkable campaign in recent weeks, and the Ipsos I&O exit poll suggests his D66 liberals have won 27 seats, two more than anti-Islam populist Geert Wilders who won the last election, reports BBC.
Although the final result is too close to call, Wilders conceded victory and Jetten told supporters “millions of Dutch people have turned a page; they’ve said goodbye to a politics of negativity”.
Three other parties are close behind, including the Conservative Liberals, the left-wing GreenLeft-Labour party and the Christian Democrats.
Wilders led the polls throughout the election campaign, but after he pulled the plug on his own coalition in June in a row over asylum and migration, all the mainstream leaders made clear they did not wish to work with him again.
Jetten’s party, meanwhile, staged a highly successful campaign. Only a few weeks ago, the polls put D66 on just 12 seats, but the photogenic, 38-year-old leader capitalised on polished performances in a succession of TV debates and interviews.
The fact that he also competed in a TV quiz show called The Smartest Person in the weeks leading to the vote only added to his public profile.
Jetten was careful not to claim victory on Wednesday night, because the margin of error in the exit poll meant nothing was certain.
However, the conservative liberal VVD of Dilan Yesilgöz was also heading for a successful night in third place and a likely place in a future Jetten-led coalition.
Going into Wednesday’s election, voters knew the result would be on a knife-edge, as five parties were in the running to win.
Wilders’ PVV Freedom Party had won 37 seats in November 2023, but this time the electorate were clearly put off by the realisation that he could not form another coalition.
It took seven months for Wilders to reach a deal with coalition partners in 2024, only to bring down the government 11 months later.
Rob Jetten made clear he was looking for a broad-based coalition that was both “stable and ambitious”, and he pointed out it was unprecedented for the winning party to score fewer than 30 seats in parliament.
He named the Labour(PvdA)-GreenLeft of former European Commissioner Frans Timmermans as one potential coalition partner, along with Yesilgöz’s Conservative Liberals and a revitalised Christian Democrat CDA.
The exit poll spelt bad news for Timmermans, whose left-wing party had long been second in the polls and is now set to come fourth.
“Better times lie ahead,” he promised his supporters late on Wednesday. “Of course I’m hugely disappointed,” he added, and announced he was stepping down and taking responsibility for the result.
Timmermans and Wilders are both in their early 60s and entered politics at the same time, and there is now a sense that Dutch voters are prepared to try something new.
Wilders, however, said he was going nowhere: “You won’t be rid of me until I’m 80.” He remained bullish about his Freedom Party’s performance: “I would naturally rather have seen more seats… but we have still had our second best result.”
Matthijs Rooduijn of the University of Amsterdam said Wilders’ party had lost the support of many of its moderate voters to other parties as well as many on the more radical side.
But, he said, “the losses could have been worse”, given that Wilders had himself broken up the last coalition and had campaigned less actively than his rivals.
Centrist liberals head for shock victory in Dutch election, exit poll says
